Nimon (language): Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{Wikipediainfo|Linear A}} {{You may|Nimon|n1=the species}} '''Nimon''', also called '''Linear A''' or '''Minoan''' by those who believed it to be an ancient language from the...") |
m (Bot: Cosmetic changes) |
||
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Wikipediainfo|Linear A}} | {{Wikipediainfo|Linear A}} | ||
{{You may|Nimon|n1=the species}} | {{You may|Nimon|n1=the species}} | ||
'''Nimon''', also called '''Linear A''' or '''Minoan''' by those who believed it to be an ancient language from the [[island]] of [[Crete]], was the | '''Nimon''', also called '''Linear A''' or '''Minoan''' by those who believed it to be an ancient [[language]] from the [[island]] of [[Crete]], was the language of the [[alien]] [[Nimon]] [[species]]. The [[Sword of Aegeus]], purported to have belonged to [[Theseus]], had inscriptions in Nimon that acted as a [[computer program]] that delivered instructions to [[robot]]ic [[bronze]] [[Minotaur]] [[statue]]s. | ||
[[File:Aegeus sword Nimon language Maze of Death.jpg|thumb|right|Sword with Nimon inscription ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Maze of Doom (novel)|The Maze of Doom]]'')]] | |||
[[Daedalus (mythology)|Daedalus]] studied the written Nimon language from tablets he found in a Nimon ship that crashed on the island of Crete in 2000 [[BC]]. He was able to decipher enough of the language to write rudimentary instructions for how to create and control bronze [[bull]] statues fashioned after the Nimons. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Maze of Doom (novel)|The Maze of Doom]]'') | |||
[[ | [[Category:Alphabets and writing systems]] | ||
[[Category:Languages from the real world]] | [[Category:Languages from the real world]] |
Latest revision as of 00:16, 4 September 2020
- You may be looking for the species.
Nimon, also called Linear A or Minoan by those who believed it to be an ancient language from the island of Crete, was the language of the alien Nimon species. The Sword of Aegeus, purported to have belonged to Theseus, had inscriptions in Nimon that acted as a computer program that delivered instructions to robotic bronze Minotaur statues.
Daedalus studied the written Nimon language from tablets he found in a Nimon ship that crashed on the island of Crete in 2000 BC. He was able to decipher enough of the language to write rudimentary instructions for how to create and control bronze bull statues fashioned after the Nimons. (PROSE: The Maze of Doom)