Master ASCII–Language Interoperability Reference

Linking Graphemes, Logograms, Semiotics, and Predefined Naming Across All Languages

Provenance:
This page extends and merges the content from
ASCII Coherence Interoperability Map
and the Integrated Language–System Interoperability Node,
linking them to the Codex’s cross-phase interoperability structure.


ASCII Keyboard Diagram with Logogram & Semiotic Layer


+————————————————————————–+ | Esc | F1 | F2 | F3 | F4 | F5 | F6 | F7 | F8 | F9 | F10 | |————————————————————————–| | `~ (Logogram: ~ Tilde, Semiotic: Approximation) | | 1! (Numeral One, Logogram: ! Exclamation, Semiotic: Emphasis) | | 2@ (Numeral Two, Logogram: @ At, Semiotic: Address/Location) | | 3# (Numeral Three, Logogram: # Number, Semiotic: Index/Tag) | | 4$ (Numeral Four, Logogram: $ Dollar, Semiotic: Currency) | | 5% (Numeral Five, Logogram: % Percent, Semiotic: Ratio) | | 6^ (Numeral Six, Logogram: ^ Caret, Semiotic: Superscript/Power) | | 7& (Numeral Seven, Logogram: & Ampersand, Semiotic: Conjunction) | | 8* (Numeral Eight, Logogram: * Asterisk, Semiotic: Multiplication/Note) | | 9( (Numeral Nine, Logogram: ( Open Paren, Semiotic: Encapsulation) | | 0) (Numeral Zero, Logogram: ) Close Paren, Semiotic: Encapsulation) | | -_ (Hyphen/Underscore, Semiotic: Range/Join) | | =+ (Equal/Plus, Semiotic: Equality/Add) | +————————————————————————–+


Language Unit Mapping Chain

ASCII Key / SymbolGraphemeLogogram / Semiotic RoleMorpheme PotentialLexeme ExampleInteroperability Role
@@Address/Location“at”email@domainUniversal addressing in digital systems
&&Conjunction“and”R&DLogical/semantic linking in commands
%%Ratioper centum50%Mathematical/statistical contexts
==Equalityequala=bUniversal comparison in code/math
**Multiplication/Notestar/asteriskfootnoteMarking priority or multiplication

Coherence Path from Key to Interoperable Intelligence

[ASCII Key Press] ↓ [Grapheme] ↓ [Logogram/Semiotic Value] ↓ [Morpheme] ↓ [Lexeme] ↓ [Syntax Layer] ↓ [Semantic Coherence] ↓ [Cross-Language Interoperability Node]


Predefined Naming Rules for Alphanumeric Symbols

  1. Numeric Keys (0–9) retain numeric value across all languages, with semantic context determined by domain (math, date, identifier).
  2. Alphabetic Keys (A–Z) map to graphemes that can transform into phonemes and morphemes depending on language overlay.
  3. Symbol Keys (@, #, &, etc.) are globally fixed in ASCII codepoint, but their semantic overlays (hashtags, email, conjunction) are domain-driven.
  4. Naming Consistency: Every symbol is assigned a canonical definition in the interoperability ledger, with etymon and SGI verification.

Cross-References


Closing Statement:
This unified ASCII–Language interoperability mapping creates a predictable foundation for communication across all languages and systems. By tying physical keys to graphemes, logograms, semiotics, and then to language units through predefined naming, the framework ensures coherent interoperability regardless of linguistic overlays or operating systems.