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Cake day: March 8th, 2025

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  • … That’s. So. COOL! AHH- :D

    so, if you were to start learning a new alphabet and accompanying language, those letters might begin to take on colors of their own, like with Cyrillic and Russian. Ahhh- that’s so strange and awesome! Er, well, to someone who doesn’t have synesthesia (me).

    Thanks for answering my questions and being so detailed in your responses! Last question - does punctuation have any effect on the colors you see? I imagine punctuation symbols don’t do anything on their own, since they’d be just that - symbols. But if they’re used in the context of language/communication, are they affected by your synesthesia as well?


  • !!! Interesting. So, I guess, it’s the visual processing of characters into language?

    Does の have the same(-ish) color as any other letters or numbers for you?

    Sorry for the continuing questions. I don’t have synesthesia, but I find it incredibly fascinating, just due to how different parts of the brain are activated when interpreting sensory input.



  • Also, what about different alphabets? Is it a thing where all characters (letters, numbers) have color? Or is it like, idk, the mental processing of “this character means the letter C. The letter C, brain tells me, I recognize as part of language. Language begets words, which begets colors”?

    This is super fascinating to me. Like, if you knew the phonetic sound a Japanese hiragana character makes, would you start to see that character in the colors that correspond with roman spelling?

    Like の is prounced and spelled in the Roman alphabet as “no”.

    Does の now have the same colors as “no”?