Week 7 - Writing Systems Flashcards

1
Q

Basic types of phonographic systems

A

SEGMENTAL

- abjad (consonant only)
- alphabetic (consonant and vowel)

SYLLABIC
- (entire syllables)

ALPHA-SYLLABIC
- ABUGIDA (syllabic but based on consonants w default vowel)

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2
Q

SYLLABIC systems

A

Syllabary: each symbol rep distinct syllable

  • only used for languages w relatively small no. of possible syllables
    • Mycenean Greek
    • amahric
    • Cherokee
  • JAPANESE hiragana / katakana
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3
Q

ABJAD systems

A

Consonantary or Consonantal Alphabet

Name derives from First letters in the Arabic abjad: ʔ, b, j, and d.

  • Arabic (no vowel points)
  • Hebrew
  • Phoenician

Egyptian mono-consonantal signs
Probably developed from logograms via rebus or acrophonic principles.
- Unlike modern abjads, used primarily as phonetic indicators in mixed representations.

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4
Q

ALPHABETIC systems

A

Set of symbols representing both consonantal and vowel phonemes

  • Latin
  • Greek
  • English
  • Thai

Enormously popular, possibly bc of utility

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5
Q

the “ideal” alphabetic system

A

Ideally, each symbol represent distinct phoneme, 1 to 1

  • alphabets typically exploit systems which do not meet ‘ideal’
    • MULTIGRAPHS (2 or more com. for 1 phoneme)= ‘SH’
    • UNDER-DIFFERENTIATION (fail to differentiate between 2 distinct phonemes) = TH and TH
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6
Q

ABUGIDA

A

From ethiopian Ge’ez script, first 4 letters “a” “bu” “gi” “da”
- alphasyllabary or SYLLABIC ALPHABET

 - Basic symbols represent a CONSONANT and INHERENT/DEFAULT VOWEL together: CV
 - Diacritics added to indicate:
        - that consonant w different vowel
        - that consonant alone, as at end of syllable

DENVAGARI - used to write Hindi, Gujari, etc
> consonant only (diacritic can ‘cancel’ vowel
> Vowel-only syllables also have own symbols (ie when syllable doesn’t commence with consonant)

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7
Q

UTILITY: Size of the set of symbols

A

Given that languages have:

  • thousands of words
  • perhaps hundreds of distinct syllables,
  • often <100 n 12 - 100 phonemes

LOGOGRAPHIC SYSTEM @ 1 symbol per word
= thousands of symbols

SYLLABIC SYSTEM @ 1 symbol per syllable
= maybe hundreds of symbols
- English has ~10k monosyllables…

ALPHABETIC SYSTEM @ 1 symbol per sound
= 12 - 60 symbols

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8
Q

LINEARITY

A

Writing systems = sub-classified based on the placement / direction of symbols

Mixed/variable:
eg Chinese, Japanese: Horizontal First or vertical First
eg Egyptian hieroglyphics: L-R or R-L.

Boustrophedon: reverse direction from one line to next. From Greek bous ‘ox, cow’ + strephein ‘to turn’ ‘as the ox plows’

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9
Q

Interpreting Unknown Writing

A
Rosetta stone
Greek
Egyptian Hieroglyphs
    - Hieretic
    - Demotic

1814 Thomas Young matched greek names w/cartouches - first sound/hieroglyphic match
Jean-François Champollion used Rosetta Stone to transliterate Egyptian, announcing his results in 1822

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10
Q

Current Controversy: WEST INDUS

A

4000 linear inscriptions on seals, miniature tablets, pottery, stoneware, copper plates, tools, weapons, and wood

- ave.5 symbols per transcription, max. of 17. 
- Indus Valley civilization ca. 2600-1900 BCE. 
 - Approx. 400 distinct symbols n possibly suggesting a syllabic and/or logographic system. 

Disputes include

  • significance of the brevity of transcriptions
  • the overall probabilities of sequencing vs non-linguistic systems
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11
Q

RONGORONGO

A

Rongorongo (Easter Island)

  • after 400 CE
  • Written in reverse boustrophedon:
  • Left to right, but from bottom to top
  • Alternate lines were written upside down.
  • Decipherment is still problematic Few texts exist.
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