In this illustration I arrange the pictographs in groups that concern: men, animals, plants, tools, and weapons. They suit fine into those catagories. What is more spectacular is that the signs, in accordance with the true inscription, belong together two by two, in what I call "stems". These stems are furthermore in compliance with four stem-groups, and turn up to be a very efficient instrument for the understanding of the disc.
Before you'll find no indicator, in whatever enumerations you try, whereas the inscription literally 'explodes' in categories of divisibility by eleven, after the acceptance of my 22 stem-forms. A classic break-through, what riddles concern. I define a stem as: A sequence of two (and only two) signs, which is repeated in at least one more signgroup. The stem is not allowed to overlap any other stem, which is all ready confirmed by a higher frequency.
NB! If you try the definition with some paragraphs based on language, you typically will get clusters of unbreakable signs, and only very few stems.
(A tendency of order inside the stems is seen as well; only two out of the thirthy stem-signs occur in both positions inside the various stems, "sign F and Q").

The Phaistos disc alias the Minoan calendar