List of writing systems explained

Writing systems are used to record human language, and may be classified according to certain common features.

The usual name of the script is given first; the name of the languages in which the script is written follows (in brackets), particularly in the case where the language name differs from the script name. Other informative or qualifying annotations for the script may also be provided.

Proto-writing and ideographic systems

Ideographic scripts (in which graphemes are ideograms representing concepts or ideas rather than a specific word in a language) and pictographic scripts (in which the graphemes are iconic pictures) are not thought to be able to express all that can be communicated by language, as argued by the linguists John DeFrancis and J. Marshall Unger. Essentially, they postulate that no true writing system can be completely pictographic or ideographic; it must be able to refer directly to a language in order to have the full expressive capacity of a language. Unger disputes claims made on behalf of Blissymbols in his 2004 book Ideogram.

Although a few pictographic or ideographic scripts exist today, there is no single way to read them because there is no one-to-one correspondence between symbol and language. Hieroglyphs were commonly thought to be ideographic before they were translated, and to this day, Chinese is often erroneously said to be ideographic.[1] In some cases of ideographic scripts, only the author of a text can read it with any certainty, and it may be said that they are interpreted rather than read. Such scripts often work best as mnemonic aids for oral texts or as outlines that will be fleshed out in speech.

There are also symbol systems used to represent things other than language, or to represent constructed languages:

Linear B also incorporates ideograms.

Logographic systems

In logographic writing systems, glyphs represent words or morphemes (meaningful components of words, as in mean-ing-ful) rather than phonetic elements.

No logographic script is composed solely of logograms. All contain graphemes that represent phonetic (sound-based) elements as well. These phonetic elements may be used on their own (to represent, for example, grammatical inflections or foreign words), or may serve as phonetic complements to a logogram (used to specify the sound of a logogram that might otherwise represent more than one word). In the case of Chinese, the phonetic element is built into the logogram itself; in Egyptian and Mayan, many glyphs are purely phonetic, whereas others function as either logograms or phonetic elements, depending on context. For this reason, many such scripts may be more properly referred to as logosyllabic or complex scripts; the terminology used is largely a product of custom in the field, and is to an extent arbitrary.

Consonant-based logographies

Syllable-based logographies

Syllabaries

In a syllabary, graphemes represent syllables or moras. (The 19th-century term syllabics usually referred to abugidas rather than true syllabaries.)

Semi-syllabaries

In most of these systems, some consonant-vowel combinations are written as syllables, but others are written as consonant plus vowel. In the case of Old Persian, all vowels were written regardless, so it was effectively a true alphabet despite its syllabic component. In Japanese a similar system plays a minor role in foreign borrowings; for example, [tu] is written [to]+[u], and [ti] as [te]+[i]. Paleohispanic semi-syllabaries behaved as a syllabary for the stop consonants and as an alphabet for the rest of consonants and vowels.

The Tartessian or Southwestern script is typologically intermediate between a pure alphabet and the Paleohispanic full semi-syllabaries. Although the letter used to write a stop consonant was determined by the following vowel, as in a full semi-syllabary, the following vowel was also written, as in an alphabet. Some scholars treat Tartessian as a redundant semi-syllabary, others treat it as a redundant alphabet. Other scripts, such as Bopomofo, are semi-syllabic in a different sense: they transcribe half syllables. That is, they have letters for syllable onsets and rimes (kan = "k-an") rather than for consonants and vowels (kan = "k-a-n").

Consonant-vowel semi-syllabaries

Onset-rime semi-syllabaries

Segmental systems

A segmental script has graphemes which represent the phonemes (basic unit of sound) of a language.

Note that there need not be (and rarely is) a one-to-one correspondence between the graphemes of the script and the phonemes of a language. A phoneme may be represented only by some combination or string of graphemes, the same phoneme may be represented by more than one distinct grapheme, the same grapheme may stand for more than one phoneme, or some combination of all of the above.

Segmental scripts may be further divided according to the types of phonemes they typically record:

Abjads

An abjad is a segmental script containing symbols for consonants only, or where vowels are optionally written with diacritics ("pointing") or only written word-initially.

True alphabets

A true alphabet contains separate letters (not diacritic marks) for both consonants and vowels.

Linear nonfeatural alphabets

Linear alphabets are composed of lines on a surface, such as ink on paper.

Featural linear alphabets

A featural script has elements that indicate the components of articulation, such as bilabial consonants, fricatives, or back vowels. Scripts differ in how many features they indicate.

Linear alphabets arranged into syllabic blocks

Manual alphabets

Manual alphabets are frequently found as parts of sign languages. They are not used for writing per se, but for spelling out words while signing.

Other non-linear alphabets

These are other alphabets composed of something other than lines on a surface.

Abugidas

An abugida, or alphasyllabary, is a segmental script in which vowel sounds are denoted by diacritical marks or other systematic modification of the consonants. Generally, however, if a single letter is understood to have an inherent unwritten vowel, and only vowels other than this are written, then the system is classified as an abugida regardless of whether the vowels look like diacritics or full letters. The vast majority of abugidas are found from India to Southeast Asia and belong historically to the Brāhmī family, however the term is derived from the first characters of the abugida in Ge'ez: አ (A) ቡ (bu) ጊ (gi) ዳ (da) — (compare with alphabet). Unlike abjads, the diacritical marks and systemic modifications of the consonants are not optional.

Brahmi family

Other abugidas

Final consonant-diacritic abugidas

In at least one abugida, not only the vowel but any syllable-final consonant is written with a diacritic. That is, if representing [o] with an under-ring, and final [k] with an over-cross, [sok] would be written as pronounced as /s̥̽/.

Vowel-based abugidas

In a few abugidas, the vowels are basic, and the consonants secondary. If no consonant is written in Pahawh Hmong, it is understood to be /k/; consonants are written after the vowel they precede in speech. In Japanese Braille, the vowels but not the consonants have independent status, and it is the vowels which are modified when the consonant is y or w.

List of writing systems by adoption

The following list contains writing systems that are in active use by a population of at least 50,000.

Name of scriptTypePopulation actively using (in millions)Languages associated withRegions using script de facto
Latin
Latin
Alphabet4900+[2] [3] Latin[4] and Romance languages (languages that evolved from Latin: Italian, French, Portuguese, Spanish and Romanian)
Germanic languages (English, Dutch, German, Nordic languages)[5]
Celtic languages (Welsh, Irish and Scottish Gaelic)[6]
Baltic languages (Latvian and Lithuanian)
Some Slavic languages (Polish, Czech, Slovak, Croatian, Slovenian)
Albanian
Uralic languages (Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian)
Malayo-Polynesian languages (Malaysian,[7] Indonesian, Filipino, etc.)
Turkic languages (Turkish,[8] Azerbaijani, Uzbek, Turkmen)
Some Cushitic languages (Somali, Afar, Oromo)
Bantu languages (for example: Swahili)
Vietnamese (an Austroasiatic language)[9]
others
Worldwide
Chinese
汉字
漢字
Logographic1541[10] Sinitic languages (Mandarin, Min, Wu, Yue, Jin, Gan, Hakka and others)
Japanese (Kanji)
Korean (Hanja)[11]
Vietnamese (Chu Nom obsolete)
Zhuang (Sawndip)
Eastern Asia, Singapore
Arabic
العربية
Abjad or Abugida (when diacritics are used)828Arabic (a Semitic language)
Several Indo-Iranian languages (Persian, Kurdish, Urdu, Punjabi (Shahmukhi in Pakistan), Pashto, Sindhi, Balochi, Kashmiri)
Some Turkic languages (Uyghur, Kazakh (in China), Azeri (in Iran))Malay (in Brunei)
others
Afghanistan, Algeria, Bahrain, Brunei, Chad, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Mauritania, Morocco, Libya, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates and Yemen
Devanagari
देवनागरी
Abugida480.5Hindi, Nepali, Marathi, BhojpuriIndia, Nepal and Fiji
Cyrillic
Кирилиця
Alphabet289The majority of the Slavic languages (Bulgarian and Macedonian, Russian, Serbian, Belarusian, Ukrainian, others). Non-Slavic languages of the former Soviet Union, such as West- and East Caucasian languages (Abkhaz, Chechen, Avar, others), Uralic languages (Karelian, others), Iranian languages (Ossetic, Tajik, others) and Turkic language (Kyrgyz, Tatar, Azeri (formerly), and others).Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Russia, Serbia, Tajikistan and Ukraine
Bengali–Assamese
বাংলা-অসমীয়া
Abugida234Some Indo-Iranian languages (Assamese, Bengali)Bangladesh and India
Kana
かな
カナ
Syllabary123JapaneseJapan
Telugu
తెలుగు
Abugida83India
Hangul
한글
조선글
Alphabet, featural81.7Korean, Cia-Cia (an Austronesian language)North Korea and South Korea, Indonesia
Tamil
தமிழ்
Abugida78.6TamilIndia, Sri Lanka, Singapore
Thai
ไทย
Abugida70ThaiThailand
Gujarati
ગુજરાતી
Abugida57.1GujaratiIndia
Kannada
ಕನ್ನಡ
Abugida45[12] Kannada (a Dravidian language)India
Geʽez
ግዕዝ
Abugida41.85Amharic, TigrinyaEthiopia, Eritrea
Burmese
မြန်မာ
Abugida39[13] Burmese (a Lolo-Burmese language)Myanmar
Malayalam
മലയാളം
Abugida38MalayalamIndia
Odia
ଓଡ଼ିଆ
Abugida35OdiaIndia
Gurmukhi
ਗੁਰਮੁਖੀ
Abugida27.743PunjabiIndia
Sinhala
සිංහල
Abugida16SinhaleseSri Lanka
Khmer
ខ្មែរ
Abugida16KhmerCambodia
Greek
Ελληνικά
Alphabet13.5GreekGreece, Cyprus
Ol Chiki
ᱚᱞ ᱪᱤᱠᱤ
Alphabet7.3SantaliIndia
Lao
ລາວ
Abugida7Lao (a Tai language)Laos
Hebrew
עברית
Abjad (or rarely Abugida when diacritics are used) or Alphabet when used for Yiddish6.5Hebrew, YiddishIsrael
Tibetan
བོད་
Abugida6.241Dzongkha, Tibetan and SikkimeseChina, Bhutan, India
Armenian
Հայոց
Alphabet5.4ArmenianArmenia
Mongolian
Alphabet5.2MongolianMongolia, China
Georgian
ქართული
Alphabet3.7GeorgianGeorgia
Meitei
Abugida2Meitei (officially termed as "Manipuri") (a Sino-Tibetan language)
Chakma
Abugida0.8Chakma, Tongchangya & PaliIndia, Myanmar & Bangladesh.
Thaana
ދިވެހި
Abugida0.34MaldivianMaldives
Canadian Syllabics
ᖃᓂᐅᔮᖅᐸᐃᑦ
ᒐᐦᑲᓯᓇᐦᐃᑫᐤ
ᑯᖾᖹ ᖿᐟᖻ ᓱᖽᐧᖿ
ᑐᑊᘁᗕᑋᗸ
Abugida0.07Inuktitut (an Inuit language), some Algonquian languages (Cree, Iyuw Iyimuun, Innu-aimun, Anishinaabemowin, Siksika), some Athabaskan languages (Dakelh, Dene K'e, Denesuline)Canada

Undeciphered and possible writing systems

See main article: Undeciphered writing systems.

These systems have not been deciphered. In some cases, such as Meroitic, the sound values of the glyphs are known, but the texts still cannot be read because the language is not understood. Several of these systems, such as Isthmian script and Indus script, are claimed to have been deciphered, but these claims have not been confirmed by independent researchers. In many cases it is doubtful that they are actually writing. The Vinča symbols appear to be proto-writing, and quipu may have recorded only numerical information. There are doubts that the Indus script is writing, and the Phaistos Disc has so little content or context that its nature is undetermined.

Undeciphered manuscripts

Comparatively recent manuscripts and other texts written in undeciphered (and often unidentified) writing systems; some of these may represent ciphers of known languages or hoaxes.

Phonetic alphabets

This section lists alphabets used to transcribe phonetic or phonemic sound; not to be confused with spelling alphabets like the ICAO spelling alphabet. Some of these are used for transcription purposes by linguists; others are pedagogical in nature or intended as general orthographic reforms.

Special alphabets

Alphabets may exist in forms other than visible symbols on a surface. Some of these are:

Tactile alphabets

Manual alphabets

Long-distance signaling

Alternative alphabets

Fictional writing systems

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Halliday, M.A.K., Spoken and written language, Deakin University Press, 1985, p.19
  2. Web site: The World's 5 Most Commonly Used Writing Systems . 2023-04-13 . Britannica . Don . Vaughan . 23 Nov 2020 . en.
  3. Difficult to determine, as it is used to write a very large number of languages with varying literacy rates among them.
  4. alphabet originally created to this language
  5. replaced the runic alphabet
  6. replaced the Ogham
  7. replaced the Arabic alphabet
  8. replaced the Arabic script
  9. replaced the Chu Nom
  10. Population using script where it is official, according to 100% alphabetization.
  11. [Hanja]
  12. Based on 46 million speakers of Kannada, Tulu, Konkani, Kodava, Badaga in a state with a 75.6 literacy rate. url=http://updateox.com/india/26-populated-cities-karnataka-population-sex-ratio-literacy
  13. Based on 42 million speakers of Burmese in a country (Myanmar) with a 92% literacy rate.