Zanabazar square script explained

Zanabazar's square script
Type:Abugida
Time:unknown
Languages:Mongolian, Tibetan, Sanskrit
Fam1:Egyptian
Fam2:Proto-Sinaitic
Fam3:Phoenician
Fam4:Aramaic
Fam5:Brahmi
Fam6:Gupta
Fam7:Tibetan
Fam8:Phagspa
Creator:Zanabazar
Sample:Monggol in kebtege dorbeljin bicig.png
Iso15924:Zanb
Note:none

Zanabazar's square script is a horizontal Mongolian square script (Mongolian: Хэвтээ Дөрвөлжин бичиг|Hevtee Dörvöljin bichig or Mongolian: Хэвтээ Дөрвөлжин Үсэг|Hevtee Dörvöljin Üseg|label=none), an abugida developed by the monk and scholar Zanabazar based on the Tibetan alphabet to write Mongolian. It can also be used to write Tibetan language and Sanskrit as a geometric typeface.[1] [2]

It was re-discovered in 1801 and the script's applications during its using period are not known. It read left to right, and employed vowel diacritics above and below the consonant letters.[3]

Letters

Vowels

The Zanabazar Square script is an abugida. Consonant represent a syllable with an inherent vowel /a/. The vowel can be changed by adding a diacritic to the consonant. Only the vowel /a/ is written as an independent letter; other independent vowels, for example those at the start of a word which can't be attached to a consonant, are written by adding the appropriate diacritic to the letter . A length mark indicates that the vowel sound is long and a candrabindu indicates that it is nasalised.[4] The final consonant mark functions as a virama, or "killer stroke" that removes the inherent vowel, leaving an isolated consonant. When transcribing Sanskrit or Tibetan, a different virama, is used. Two additional diacritics are used for Sanskrit transcription, the anusvara, which adds nasalisation and the visarga, which adds aspiration.

Vowels, diacritics, and examples
scope=row style="text-align: right"diacritics
scope=row style="text-align: right"independent vowels
scope=row style="text-align: right"consonant + diacritic

Consonants

The Zanabazar script includes twenty basic consonants used for writing Mongolian, and twenty additional consonants that are used for transcribing Sanskrit, Tibetan, Chinese, and other languages.

Tibetan consonant clusters

The following diacritics are used for transcribing Tibetan consonant clusters.

Clusters letters and examples
scope=row style=text-align: rightdiacritic
scope=row style=text-align: rightconsonant ⟨⟩ + diacritic

Other characters

Head marks are similar to Tibetan yig mgo, and may be used to mark the beginning of a text, page, or section. They may be decorated with a candra, or

Head marks
Punctuation

Unicode

See main article: Zanabazar Square (Unicode block).

"Zanabazar Square" has been included in the Unicode Standard since the release of Unicode version 10.0 in June 2017. The Zanabazar Square block contains 72 characters.[5]

The Unicode block for Zanabazar Square is U+11A00–U+11A4F:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Shagdarsürüng, Tseveliin . "Study of Mongolian Scripts (Graphic Study or Grammatology). Enl.". Bibliotheca Mongolica: Monograph 1. 2001.
  2. Bareja-Starzyńska, Agata. Byambaa Ragchaa . "Notes on the Pre-existences of the First Khalkha Jetsundampa Zanabazar according to His Biography Written in the Horizontal Square Script.". Rocznik Orientalistyczny 1 . 2012.
  3. Web site: L2/15-337: Proposal to Encode the Zanabazar Square Script in ISO/IEC 10646 . Anshuman . Pandey . ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG2 . 2015-12-03.
  4. Web site: Mongolian Horizontal Square Script . www.omniglot.com . 7 May 2024.
  5. Web site: Unicode 10.0.0 . . June 20, 2017 . June 21, 2017.