How Nardagani Works
Our alphabet consists of 26 letters. 14 of these play fair: B, F, H, J, K, L, M, P, Q, R, V, W, X, and Z; they make one sound. The other 12 do not play fair, they make more than one sound: A, C, D, E, G, I, N, O, S, T, U and Y. Whenever a letter makes more than one sound it gets a symbol. With just 12 symbols, reading becomes easy.
Basic Nardagani Guidelines:
1) Whenever you see a letter or a symbol below a letter, make the sound below.
2) Whenever a letter is underlined it is silent; it makes no sound.
To be a Hero all you need is to buy one book. Then let the challenged reader find you. Read with them the 9 pages of the Sound Map. Go through the flash cards with them. Advise them to practice the flash cards once a day. Once they feel comfortable with the Sound Map and the Flash Cards have them practice their new skills by reading the practice book. Watch as this quick, easy miracle unfolds and their life blossoms.
Learn the 12 Symbols
How I developed Nardagani: I listed the 40 sounds of English, thus creating the Sound Map. Similar to the Japanese system, I grouped letters together to show how they compare and contrast, for example C, K and Q are on the same Sound Map page because they make the identical sound. A Computer Guru built the Nardagani font. English is a two-bit language, 244 letter combinations make 40 sounds. The Guru then built a program to house Nardagani. Every word in this system had to be coded into the intricate program. After hours, weeks and months of calculating work to program this simple yet elaborate system, I can 'run' any group of written words, like stories or anything on Nardagani and code it too. 12 Symbols and 2 rules are all I need for 'Readers' to be able to understand Nardagani. |
|