Using more than one hundred words from the contemporary Macedonian language, all 13 (thirteen) asymmetrical signs were wired for sound with corresponding consonants. They are:
In the previous figure we have one new sign () compared with [12], and we wired it for sound as Шт[sht].
Table 1 - Asymmetrical Signs and Their Wiring for Sound
The asymmetrical signs Ј[j], and Р[r] in today’s and in the ancient Macedonian script have the same form and the same sound. According to their written form the remaining asymmetrical signs are mutually similar, and in their pronunciation, too, for example the asymmetrical signs Ж[zh], З[z], and Ѕ[dz]. The similarity in writing and in the pronunciation also applies to the asymmetrical signs С[s], Ц[ts], Ч[tch], as well as Ш[sh], and Шт[sht].
Each of these 13 consonants on the writing surface (plane) can be written using 8 dispositions and can denote syllables with 8 vowels. All 8 (eight) positions of writing are identified in the text, which means they have been wired for sound with all 6 active vowels in today’s Slavic languages and the long forms of the vowels O[ọ] and E[ẹ] which have been preserved in the contemporary Slovenian language [1, 2], as well as in some of the dialects of the Macedonian language (Miyatchki and Vevtchanski, [3]). All forms of the asymmetrical signs with their wiring for sounds are presented in the table 1.