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Abugida

An abugida (/ɑːbʊˈɡdə, ˈæb-/ (listen), from Ge'ez: አቡጊዳ), sometimes known as alphasyllabary, neosyllabary or pseudo-alphabet, is a segmental writing system in which consonant-vowel sequences are written as units; each unit is based on a consonant letter, and vowel notation is secondary. This contrasts with a full alphabet, in which vowels have status equal to consonants, and with an abjad, in which vowel marking is absent, partial, or optional. (In less formal contexts, all three types of script may be termed "alphabets"). The terms also contrast them with a syllabary, in which the symbols cannot be split into separate consonants and vowels.

Comparison of various abugidas descended from Brahmi script. Meaning: May Śiva protect those who take delight in the language of the gods. (Kalidasa)

Related concepts were introduced independently in 1948 by James Germain Février (using the term néosyllabisme)[1] and David Diringer (using the term semisyllabary),[2] then in 1959 by Fred Householder (introducing the term pseudo-alphabet).[3] The Ethiopic term "abugida" was chosen as a designation for the concept in 1990 by Peter T. Daniels.[4][5] In 1992, Faber suggested "segmentally coded syllabically linear phonographic script", and in 1992 Bright used the term alphasyllabary,[6][7] and Gnanadesikan and Rimzhim, Katz, & Fowler have suggested aksara or āksharik.[8]

Abugidas include the extensive Brahmic family of scripts of Tibet, South and Southeast Asia, Semitic Ethiopic scripts, and Canadian Aboriginal syllabics. As is the case for syllabaries, the units of the writing system may consist of the representations both of syllables and of consonants. For scripts of the Brahmic family, the term akshara is used for the units.

Terminology

In several languages of Ethiopia and Eritrea, abugida traditionally meant letters of the Ethiopic or Ge‘ez script in which many of these languages are written. Ge'ez is one of several segmental writing systems in the world, others include Indic/Brahmic scripts and Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics. The word abugida is derived from the four letters, 'ä, bu, gi, and da, in much the same way that abecedary is derived from Latin letters a be ce de, abjad is derived from the Arabic a b j d, and alphabet is derived from the names of the two first letters in the Greek alphabet, alpha and beta. Abugida as a term in linguistics was proposed by Peter T. Daniels in his 1990 typology of writing systems.[9]

As Daniels used the word, an abugida is in contrast with a syllabary, where letters with shared consonants or vowels show no particular resemblance to one another, and also with an alphabet proper, where independent letters are used to denote both consonants and vowels. The term alphasyllabary was suggested for the Indic scripts in 1997 by William Bright, following South Asian linguistic usage, to convey the idea that "they share features of both alphabet and syllabary."[10][5]

General description

The formal definitions given by Daniels and Bright for abugida and alphasyllabary differ; some writing systems are abugidas but not alphasyllabaries, and some are alphasyllabaries but not abugidas. An abugida is defined as "a type of writing system whose basic characters denote consonants followed by a particular vowel, and in which diacritics denote other vowels".[11] (This 'particular vowel' is referred to as the inherent or implicit vowel, as opposed to the explicit vowels marked by the 'diacritics'.)[11]

An alphasyllabary is defined as "a type of writing system in which the vowels are denoted by subsidiary symbols not all of which occur in a linear order (with relation to the consonant symbols) that is congruent with their temporal order in speech".[11] Bright did not require that an alphabet explicitly represent all vowels.[5] ʼPhags-pa is an example of an abugida that is not an alphasyllabary, and modern Lao is an example of an alphasyllabary that is not an abugida, for its vowels are always explicit.

This description is expressed in terms of an abugida. Formally, an alphasyllabary that is not an abugida can be converted to an abugida by adding a purely formal vowel sound that is never used and declaring that to be the inherent vowel of the letters representing consonants. This may formally make the system ambiguous, but in practice this is not a problem, for then the interpretation with the never-used inherent vowel sound will always be a wrong interpretation. The actual pronunciation may be complicated by interactions between the sounds apparently written just as the sounds of the letters in the English words wan, gem and war are affected by neighbouring letters.

The fundamental principles of an abugida apply to words made up of consonant-vowel (CV) syllables. The syllables are written as a linear sequences of the units of the script. Each syllable is either a letter that represents the sound of a consonant and its inherent vowel or a letter modified to indicate the vowel, either by means of diacritics or by changes in the form of the letter itself. If all modifications are by diacritics and all diacritics follow the direction of the writing of the letters, then the abugida is not an alphasyllabary.

However, most languages have words that are more complicated than a sequence of CV syllables, even ignoring tone.

The first complication is syllables that consist of just a vowel (V). This issue does not arise in some languages because every syllable starts with a consonant. This is common in Semitic languages and in languages of mainland SE Asia; for such languages this issue need not arise. For some languages, a zero consonant letter is used as though every syllable began with a consonant. For other languages, each vowel has a separate letter that is used for each syllable consisting of just the vowel.

These letters are known as independent vowels, and are found in most Indic scripts. These letters may be quite different from the corresponding diacritics, which by contrast are known as dependent vowels. As a result of the spread of writing systems, independent vowels may be used to represent syllables beginning with a glottal stop, even for non-initial syllables.

The next two complications are sequences of consonants before a vowel (CCV) and syllables ending in a consonant (CVC). The simplest solution, which is not always available, is to break with the principle of writing words as a sequence of syllables and use a unit representing just a consonant (C). This unit may be represented with:

  • a modification that explicitly indicates the lack of a vowel (virama),
  • a lack of vowel marking (often with ambiguity between no vowel and a default inherent vowel),
  • vowel marking for a short or neutral vowel such as schwa (with ambiguity between no vowel and that short or neutral vowel), or
  • a visually unrelated letter.

In a true abugida, the lack of distinctive marking may result from the diachronic loss of the inherent vowel, e.g. by syncope and apocope in Hindi.

When not handled by decomposition into C + CV, CCV syllables are handled by combining the two consonants. In the Indic scripts, the earliest method was simply to arrange them vertically, but the two consonants may merge as a conjunct consonant letters, where two or more letters are graphically joined in a ligature, or otherwise change their shapes. Rarely, one of the consonants may be replaced by a gemination mark, e.g. the Gurmukhi addak.

When they are arranged vertically, as in Burmese or Khmer, they are said to be 'stacked'. Often there has been a change to writing the two consonants side by side. In the latter case, the fact of combination may be indicated by a diacritic on one of the consonants or a change in the form of one of the consonants, e.g. the half forms of Devanagari. Generally, the reading order is top to bottom or the general reading order of the script, but sometimes the order is reversed.

The division of a word into syllables for the purposes of writing does not always accord with the natural phonetics of the language. For example, Brahmic scripts commonly handle a phonetic sequence CVC-CV as CV-CCV or CV-C-CV. However, sometimes phonetic CVC syllables are handled as single units, and the final consonant may be represented:

  • in much the same way as the second consonant in CCV, e.g. in the Tibetan[citation needed], Khmer[12] and Tai Tham[13] scripts. The positioning of the components may be slightly different, as in Khmer and Tai Tham.
  • by a special dependent consonant sign, which may be a smaller or differently placed version of the full consonant letter, or may be a distinct sign altogether.
  • not at all. For example, repeated consonants need not be represented, homorganic nasals may be ignored, and in Philippine scripts, the syllable-final consonant was traditionally never represented.[14]

More complicated unit structures (e.g. CC or CCVC) are handled by combining the various techniques above.

Family-specific features

There are three principal families of abugidas, depending on whether vowels are indicated by modifying consonants by diacritics, distortion, or orientation.[15]

  • The oldest and largest is the Brahmic family of India and Southeast Asia, in which vowels are marked with diacritics and syllable-final consonants, when they occur, are indicated with ligatures, diacritics, or with a special vowel-canceling mark.
  • In the Ethiopic family, vowels are marked by modifying the shapes of the consonants, and one of the vowel-forms serves additionally to indicate final consonants.
  • In Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, vowels are marked by rotating or flipping the consonants, and final consonants are indicated with either special diacritics or superscript forms of the main initial consonants.

Lao and Tāna have dependent vowels and a zero vowel sign, but no inherent vowel.

Feature North Indic South Indic Tāna Ethiopic Canadian Aboriginal
Vowel representation
after consonant
Dependent sign (diacritic)
in distinct position per vowel
Fused diacritic Rotate/reflect
Initial vowel
representation
Distinct inline
letter per vowel[a]
Glottal stop or zero consonant
plus dependent vowel[b]
Glottal stop
plus dependent
Zero consonant
plus dependent
Inherent vowel
(value of no vowel sign)
[ə], [ɔ], [a], or [o][c] No [ɐ][17] N/A
Zero vowel sign
(sign for no value)
Often Always used when
no final vowel[d]
Ambiguous with ə ([ɨ]) Shrunk or separate letter[e]
Consonant cluster Conjunct[f] Stacked or separate[clarification needed][g] Separate
Final consonant (not sign) Inline[h] Inline Inline
Distinct final sign Only for , [i][j] No Only in Western
Final sign position Inline or top Inline, top or occasionally bottom N/A Raised or inline[clarification needed]
Exceptions
  1. ^ Tibetan, Róng and Kharoṣṭhī use the glottal stop or zero consonant plus dependent vowel.
  2. ^ Pali in the Burmese, Khmer and Tai Tham scripts uses independent vowels instead, and they are also used in loan words in the local languages. The Cham script also uses both independent vowels and glottal stop consonant plus dependent vowel.[16] In all three cases, the glottal stop letter is the same as the independent vowel letter for the inherent vowel. Conversely, the Lontara script of Sulawesi uses zero consonant plus vowel.
  3. ^ Lao has no inherent vowel – it is an alphasyllabary but not an abugida. There is also a Thai-script Pali orthography which has no inherent vowel.
  4. ^ The Thai, Lao, Tai Viet, Tai Tham and Khmer scripts often or always use the plain letter for word-final consonants, and normally do not use a zero vowel sign. However, the Thai script regularly uses it for Pali and Sanskrit.
  5. ^ Deviations include omissions[citation needed] and systematic use of i-forms[citation needed].
  6. ^ Often separate and unmodified as a result of syncope. Also, as a legitimate font fall-back, can occur as side-by-side consonants modified only by the inclusion of a virama.
  7. ^ Tamil and Lao have conjuncts formed from straightforward ligation of side by side consonants. Burmese and Tai Tham have a few conjuncts.
  8. ^ Tibetan and Khmer occasionally and Tai Tham regularly write final consonants below the rest of the akshara. This practice is the origin of the Lao letter ຽ U+0EBD LAO SEMIVOWEL SIGN NYO, and a similar sign may be found in Javanese. Tai Tham may also write several final consonants above the rest of the akshara. The Rónɡ script writes final consonants above the rest of the akshara, except that final /ŋ/ precedes the rest. The Philippine scripts do not represent final consonants.
  9. ^ The symbol for ṃ represents the sound for /m/ or /ŋ/ in some languages, and the symbol for ḥ may represent a ɡlottal stop or even /k/. Not all scripts have these symbols.
  10. ^ Tai Tham has superscript and subscript signs for final /k/. Javanese and related scripts have a superscript symbol for final /r/, though it is ultimately related to the normal letter for /r/.

Indic (Brahmic)

Indic scripts originated in India and spread to Southeast Asia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Tibet, Mongolia, and Russia. All surviving Indic scripts are descendants of the Brahmi alphabet. Today they are used in most languages of South Asia (although replaced by Perso-Arabic in Urdu, Kashmiri and some other languages of Pakistan and India), mainland Southeast Asia (Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam), Tibet (Tibetan), Indonesian archipelago (Javanese, Balinese, Sundanese), Philippines (Baybayin, Buhid, Hanunuo, Kulitan, and Aborlan Tagbanwa), Malaysia (Rencong, etc.).

The primary division is with North Indic scripts, used in Northern India, Nepal, Tibet, Bhutan, Mongolia, and Russia; and Southern Indic scripts, used in South India, Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia. South Indic letter forms are more rounded than North Indic forms, though Odia, Golmol and Litumol of Nepal script are rounded. Most North Indic scripts' full letters incorporate a horizontal line at the top, with Gujarati and Odia as exceptions; South Indic scripts do not.

Indic scripts indicate vowels through dependent vowel signs (diacritics) around the consonants, often including a sign that explicitly indicates the lack of a vowel. If a consonant has no vowel sign, this indicates a default vowel. Vowel diacritics may appear above, below, to the left, to the right, or around the consonant.

The most widely used Indic script is Devanagari, shared by Hindi, Bihari, Marathi, Konkani, Nepali, and often Sanskrit. A basic letter such as in Hindi represents a syllable with the default vowel, in this case ka ([kə]). In some languages, including Hindi, it becomes a final closing consonant at the end of a word, in this case k. The inherent vowel may be changed by adding vowel mark (diacritics), producing syllables such as कि ki, कु ku, के ke, को ko.

 
A 19th-century manuscript in the Devanagari script
Diacritic placement in Brahmic abugidas
position syllable pronunciation base form script
above के /keː/ /k(a)/ Devanagari
below कु /ku/
left कि /ki/
right को /koː/
around கௌ /kau̯/ /ka/ Tamil
surround កៀ /kie/ /kɑː/ Khmer
within ಕಿ /ki/ /ka/ Kannada
within కి /ki/ /ka/ Telugu
below and extend
to the right
ꦏꦾ /kja/ /ka/ Javanese
below and extend
to the left
ꦏꦿꦸ /kru/

In many of the Brahmic scripts, a syllable beginning with a cluster is treated as a single character for purposes of vowel marking, so a vowel marker like ि -i, falling before the character it modifies, may appear several positions before the place where it is pronounced. For example, the game cricket in Hindi is क्रिकेट cricket; the diacritic for /i/ appears before the consonant cluster /kr/, not before the /r/. A more unusual example is seen in the Batak alphabet: Here the syllable bim is written ba-ma-i-(virama). That is, the vowel diacritic and virama are both written after the consonants for the whole syllable.

In many abugidas, there is also a diacritic to suppress the inherent vowel, yielding the bare consonant. In Devanagari, क् is k, and ल् is l. This is called the virāma or halantam in Sanskrit. It may be used to form consonant clusters, or to indicate that a consonant occurs at the end of a word. Thus in Sanskrit, a default vowel consonant such as क does not take on a final consonant sound. Instead, it keeps its vowel. For writing two consonants without a vowel in between, instead of using diacritics on the first consonant to remove its vowel, another popular method of special conjunct forms is used in which two or more consonant characters are merged to express a cluster, such as Devanagari: क्ल kla. (Some fonts display this as क् followed by ल, rather than forming a conjunct. This expedient is used by ISCII and South Asian scripts of Unicode.) Thus a closed syllable such as kal requires two aksharas to write.

The Róng script used for the Lepcha language goes further than other Indic abugidas, in that a single akshara can represent a closed syllable: Not only the vowel, but any final consonant is indicated by a diacritic. For example, the syllable [sok] would be written as something like s̥̽, here with an underring representing /o/ and an overcross representing the diacritic for final /k/. Most other Indic abugidas can only indicate a very limited set of final consonants with diacritics, such as /ŋ/ or /r/, if they can indicate any at all.

Ethiopic

 
The Ge'ez script, an abugida of Eritrea and Ethiopia

In Ethiopic or Ge'ez script, fidels (individual "letters" of the script) have "diacritics" that are fused with the consonants to the point that they must be considered modifications of the form of the letters. Children learn each modification separately, as in a syllabary; nonetheless, the graphic similarities between syllables with the same consonant are readily apparent, unlike the case in a true syllabary.

Though now an abugida, the Ge'ez script, until the advent of Christianity (ca. AD 350), had originally been what would now be termed an abjad. In the Ge'ez abugida (or fidel), the base form of the letter (also known as fidel) may be altered. For example, ሀ [hə] (base form), ሁ hu (with a right-side diacritic that does not alter the letter), ሂ hi (with a subdiacritic that compresses the consonant, so it is the same height), ህ [hɨ] or [h] (where the letter is modified with a kink in the left arm).

Canadian Aboriginal syllabics

In the family known as Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, which was inspired by the Devanagari script of India, vowels are indicated by changing the orientation of the syllabogram. Each vowel has a consistent orientation; for example, Inuktitutpi,pu,pa;ti,tu,ta. Although there is a vowel inherent in each, all rotations have equal status and none can be identified as basic. Bare consonants are indicated either by separate diacritics, or by superscript versions of the aksharas; there is no vowel-killer mark.

Borderline cases

Vowelled abjads

Consonantal scripts ("abjads") are normally written without indication of many vowels. However, in some contexts like teaching materials or scriptures, Arabic and Hebrew are written with full indication of vowels via diacritic marks (harakat, niqqud) making them effectively alphasyllabaries. The Brahmic and Ethiopic families are thought to have originated from the Semitic abjads by the addition of vowel marks.

The Arabic scripts used for Kurdish in Iraq and for Uyghur in Xinjiang, China, as well as the Hebrew script of Yiddish, are fully vowelled, but because the vowels are written with full letters rather than diacritics (with the exception of distinguishing between /a/ and /o/ in the latter) and there are no inherent vowels, these are considered alphabets, not abugidas.

Phagspa

The imperial Mongol script called Phagspa was derived from the Tibetan abugida, but all vowels are written in-line rather than as diacritics. However, it retains the features of having an inherent vowel /a/ and having distinct initial vowel letters.

Pahawh

Pahawh Hmong is a non-segmental script that indicates syllable onsets and rimes, such as consonant clusters and vowels with final consonants. Thus it is not segmental and cannot be considered an abugida. However, it superficially resembles an abugida with the roles of consonant and vowel reversed. Most syllables are written with two letters in the order rime–onset (typically vowel-consonant), even though they are pronounced as onset-rime (consonant-vowel), rather like the position of the /i/ vowel in Devanagari, which is written before the consonant. Pahawh is also unusual in that, while an inherent rime /āu/ (with mid tone) is unwritten, it also has an inherent onset /k/. For the syllable /kau/, which requires one or the other of the inherent sounds to be overt, it is /au/ that is written. Thus it is the rime (vowel) that is basic to the system.[citation needed]

Meroitic

It is difficult to draw a dividing line between abugidas and other segmental scripts. For example, the Meroitic script of ancient Sudan did not indicate an inherent a (one symbol stood for both m and ma, for example), and is thus similar to Brahmic family of abugidas. However, the other vowels were indicated with full letters, not diacritics or modification, so the system was essentially an alphabet that did not bother to write the most common vowel.

Shorthand

Several systems of shorthand use diacritics for vowels, but they do not have an inherent vowel, and are thus more similar to Thaana and Kurdish script than to the Brahmic scripts. The Gabelsberger shorthand system and its derivatives modify the following consonant to represent vowels. The Pollard script, which was based on shorthand, also uses diacritics for vowels; the placements of the vowel relative to the consonant indicates tone. Pitman shorthand uses straight strokes and quarter-circle marks in different orientations as the principal "alphabet" of consonants; vowels are shown as light and heavy dots, dashes and other marks in one of 3 possible positions to indicate the various vowel-sounds. However, to increase writing speed, Pitman has rules for "vowel indication"[18] using the positioning or choice of consonant signs so that writing vowel-marks can be dispensed with.

Development

As the term alphasyllabary suggests, abugidas have been considered an intermediate step between alphabets and syllabaries. Historically, abugidas appear to have evolved from abjads (vowelless alphabets). They contrast with syllabaries, where there is a distinct symbol for each syllable or consonant-vowel combination, and where these have no systematic similarity to each other, and typically develop directly from logographic scripts. Compare the examples above to sets of syllables in the Japanese hiragana syllabary: か ka, き ki, く ku, け ke, こ ko have nothing in common to indicate k; while ら ra, り ri, る ru, れ re, ろ ro have neither anything in common for r, nor anything to indicate that they have the same vowels as the k set.

Most Indian and Indochinese abugidas appear to have first been developed from abjads with the Kharoṣṭhī and Brāhmī scripts; the abjad in question is usually considered to be the Aramaic one, but while the link between Aramaic and Kharosthi is more or less undisputed, this is not the case with Brahmi. The Kharosthi family does not survive today, but Brahmi's descendants include most of the modern scripts of South and Southeast Asia.

Ge'ez derived from a different abjad, the Sabean script of Yemen; the advent of vowels coincided with the introduction or adoption of Christianity about AD 350.[17] The Ethiopic script is the elaboration of an abjad.

The Cree syllabary was invented with full knowledge of the Devanagari system.

The Meroitic script was developed from Egyptian hieroglyphs, within which various schemes of 'group writing'[19] had been used for showing vowels.

List of abugidas

Fictional

Abugida-like scripts

References

  1. ^ Février, James Germain (1948). "Le Néosyllabisme". Histoire de l'écriture. Payot. pp. 333–383.
  2. ^ Diringer, David (1948). The Alphabet: A Key to the History of Mankind. Philosophical Library. pp. 601 (index).
  3. ^ Householder, F. (1959). Review of The Decipherment of Linear B by John Chadwick, The Classical Journal, 54(8), 379-383. Retrieved 30 September 2020, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3294984
  4. ^ Daniels, P. (1990). Fundamentals of Grammatology. Journal of the American Oriental Society, 110(4), 727-731. doi:10.2307/602899: "We must recognize that the West Semitic scripts constitute a third fundamental type of script, the kind that denotes individual consonants only. It cannot be subsumed under either of the other terms. A suitable name for this type would be "alephbeth," in honor of its Levantine origin, but this term seems too similar to "alphabet" to be practical; so I propose to call this type an "abjad," [Footnote: I.e., the alif-ba-jim order familiar from earlier Semitic alphabets, from which the modern order alif-ba-ta-tha is derived by placing together the letters with similar shapes and differing numbers of dots. The abjad is the order in which numerical values are assigned to the letters (as in Hebrew).] from the Arabic word for the traditional order6 of its script, which (unvocalized) of course falls in this category... There is yet a fourth fundamental type of script, a type recognized over forty years ago by James-Germain Fevrier, called by him the "neosyllabary" (1948, 330), and again by Fred Householder thirty years ago, who called it "pseudo-alphabet" (1959, 382). These are the scripts of Ethiopia and "greater India" that use a basic form for the specific syllable consonant + a particular vowel (in practice always the unmarked a) and modify it to denote the syllables with other vowels or with no vowel. Were it not for this existing term, I would propose maintaining the pattern by calling this type an "abugida," from the Ethiopian word for the auxiliary order of consonants in the signary."
  5. ^ a b c William Bright (2000:65–66): "A Matter of Typology: Alphasyllabaries and Abugidas". In: Studies in the Linguistic Sciences. Volume 30, Number 1, pages 63–71
  6. ^ Amalia E. Gnanadesikan (2017) Towards a typology of phonemic scripts, Writing Systems Research, 9:1, 14-35, DOI: 10.1080/17586801.2017.1308239 "The second is that of Bright (1996, 1999) which follows Daniels in abjads and alphabets (Bright, 1999), but identifies instead of abugidas a category of alphasyllabaries. As Bright (1999) points out, the definition of abugida and the definition of alpha- syllabary differ. This fact alone suggests that at least one of the two classifications is either incom- plete or inaccurate—or at the very least that they have two different purposes. This paper is intended as a (long-delayed) response to Bright (1999) and argues that both of these systems are in fact incomplete."
  7. ^ Littera ex occidente: Toward a Functional History of Writing. Peter T. Daniels, in STUDIES IN SEMITIC AND AFROASIATIC LINGUISTICS PRESENTED TO GENE B. GRAGG Edited by CYNTHIA L. MILLER pages 53-69:"Alongside the terms I rejected (neosyllabary [Février 1948], pseudo-alphabet [Householder 1959], semisyllabary [Diringer 1948], and alphasyllabary [Bright 1992]) because they imply exactly the notion I am trying to refute – that the abugida is a kind of alphabet or a kind of syllabary – I have just come across semialphabet in the Encyclopœdia Britannica Micropœdia (though what is intended by the distinction "the syllabic KharoœøÏ (sic) and semialphabetic BrΩhmÏ" [s.v. "Indic Writing Systems"] is unfathomable). W. Bright denies having devised the term alphasyllabary, but it has not yet been found to occur earlier than his 1992 encyclopedia (in 1990: 136 he approved semisyllabary). Compare Daniels 1996b: 4 n. * and Bright 2000 for the different conceptualizations of abugida and alphasyllabary: functional vs. formal, as it happens. The words abjad and abugida are simply words in Arabic and Ethiopic, respectively, for the ancient Northwest Semitic order of letters, which is used in those languages in certain functions alongside the customary orders (in Arabic reflecting rearrangement according to shape, and in Ethiopic reflecting an entirely different letter-order tradition"
  8. ^ Amalia E. Gnanadesikan (2017) Towards a typology of phonemic scripts, Writing Systems Research, 9:1, 14-35, DOI: 10.1080/17586801.2017.1308239 "This type of script has been given many names, among them semi-alphabet (Diringer, 1948, referring to Brāhmī), semi-syllabary (Diringer, 1948, referring to Devanāgarī) or semi-syllabic script (Baker, 1997), syllabic alphabet (Coulmas, 1999), alphasyllabary (Bright, 1996, 1999; Trigger, 2004), neosyllabary (Daniels, 1990), abugida (Daniels, 1996a) and segmentally coded syllabically linear phonographic script (Faber, 1992) as well as the Sanskrit-inspired terms aksara system (Gnanadesikan, 2009) or āksharik script (Rimzhim, Katz, & Fowler, 2014). As is discussed further below, however, there is a considerable degree of typological diversity in this family of scripts."
  9. ^ Daniels, Peter T. (October–December 1990), "Fundamentals of Grammatology", Journal of the American Oriental Society, 119 (4): 727–731, doi:10.2307/602899, JSTOR 602899
  10. ^ He describes this term as "formal", i.e., more concerned with graphic arrangement of symbols, whereas abugida was "functional", putting the focus on sound–symbol correspondence. However, this is not a distinction made in the literature.
  11. ^ a b c Glossary of Daniels & Bright (1996) The World's Writing Systems
  12. ^ "The Unicode Standard, Version 8.0" (PDF). August 2015. Section 16.4 Khmer, Subscript Consonants. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  13. ^ Everson, Michael; Hosken, Martin (6 August 2006). "Proposal for encoding the Lanna script in the BMP of the UCS" (PDF). Working Group Document. International Organization for Standardization. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  14. ^ Joel C. Kuipers & Ray McDermott, "Insular Southeast Asian Scripts". In Daniels & Bright (1996) The World's Writing Systems
  15. ^ John D. Berry (2002:19) Language Culture Type
  16. ^ Everson, Michael (6 August 2006). "Proposal for encoding the Cham script in the BMP of the UCS" (PDF). Unicode Consortium. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  17. ^ a b Getatchew Haile, "Ethiopic Writing". In Daniels & Bright (1996) The World's Writing Systems
  18. ^ "The Joy of Pitman Shorthand". pitmanshorthand.homestead.com.
  19. ^ James Hoch (1994) Semitic Words in Egyptian Texts of the New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Periods
  20. ^ "ScriptSource – Bengali (Bangla)". scriptsource.org. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  21. ^ "Ihathvé Sabethired". omniglot.com.

External links

  • Syllabic alphabets – Omniglot's list of abugidas, including examples of various writing systems
  • Alphabets – list of abugidas and other scripts (in Spanish)

abugida, confused, with, abjad, semi, syllabary, abugida, ɑː, listen, from, አቡጊዳ, sometimes, known, alphasyllabary, neosyllabary, pseudo, alphabet, segmental, writing, system, which, consonant, vowel, sequences, written, units, each, unit, based, consonant, le. Not to be confused with Abjad or Semi syllabary An abugida ɑː b ʊ ˈ ɡ iː d e ˈ ae b listen from Ge ez አቡጊዳ sometimes known as alphasyllabary neosyllabary or pseudo alphabet is a segmental writing system in which consonant vowel sequences are written as units each unit is based on a consonant letter and vowel notation is secondary This contrasts with a full alphabet in which vowels have status equal to consonants and with an abjad in which vowel marking is absent partial or optional In less formal contexts all three types of script may be termed alphabets The terms also contrast them with a syllabary in which the symbols cannot be split into separate consonants and vowels Comparison of various abugidas descended from Brahmi script Meaning May Siva protect those who take delight in the language of the gods Kalidasa This article contains Ethiopic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Ethiopic characters This article contains Indic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks or boxes misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text This article contains Canadian Aboriginal syllabic characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of syllabics This article contains letters from the Javanese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Javanese characters Related concepts were introduced independently in 1948 by James Germain Fevrier using the term neosyllabisme 1 and David Diringer using the term semisyllabary 2 then in 1959 by Fred Householder introducing the term pseudo alphabet 3 The Ethiopic term abugida was chosen as a designation for the concept in 1990 by Peter T Daniels 4 5 In 1992 Faber suggested segmentally coded syllabically linear phonographic script and in 1992 Bright used the term alphasyllabary 6 7 and Gnanadesikan and Rimzhim Katz amp Fowler have suggested aksara or aksharik 8 Abugidas include the extensive Brahmic family of scripts of Tibet South and Southeast Asia Semitic Ethiopic scripts and Canadian Aboriginal syllabics As is the case for syllabaries the units of the writing system may consist of the representations both of syllables and of consonants For scripts of the Brahmic family the term akshara is used for the units Contents 1 Terminology 2 General description 3 Family specific features 3 1 Indic Brahmic 3 2 Ethiopic 3 3 Canadian Aboriginal syllabics 4 Borderline cases 4 1 Vowelled abjads 4 2 Phagspa 4 3 Pahawh 4 4 Meroitic 4 5 Shorthand 5 Development 6 List of abugidas 6 1 Fictional 6 2 Abugida like scripts 7 References 8 External linksTerminology EditIn several languages of Ethiopia and Eritrea abugida traditionally meant letters of the Ethiopic or Ge ez script in which many of these languages are written Ge ez is one of several segmental writing systems in the world others include Indic Brahmic scripts and Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics The word abugida is derived from the four letters a bu gi and da in much the same way that abecedary is derived from Latin letters a be ce de abjad is derived from the Arabic a b j d and alphabet is derived from the names of the two first letters in the Greek alphabet alpha and beta Abugida as a term in linguistics was proposed by Peter T Daniels in his 1990 typology of writing systems 9 As Daniels used the word an abugida is in contrast with a syllabary where letters with shared consonants or vowels show no particular resemblance to one another and also with an alphabet proper where independent letters are used to denote both consonants and vowels The term alphasyllabary was suggested for the Indic scripts in 1997 by William Bright following South Asian linguistic usage to convey the idea that they share features of both alphabet and syllabary 10 5 General description EditThe formal definitions given by Daniels and Bright for abugida and alphasyllabary differ some writing systems are abugidas but not alphasyllabaries and some are alphasyllabaries but not abugidas An abugida is defined as a type of writing system whose basic characters denote consonants followed by a particular vowel and in which diacritics denote other vowels 11 This particular vowel is referred to as the inherent or implicit vowel as opposed to the explicit vowels marked by the diacritics 11 An alphasyllabary is defined as a type of writing system in which the vowels are denoted by subsidiary symbols not all of which occur in a linear order with relation to the consonant symbols that is congruent with their temporal order in speech 11 Bright did not require that an alphabet explicitly represent all vowels 5 ʼPhags pa is an example of an abugida that is not an alphasyllabary and modern Lao is an example of an alphasyllabary that is not an abugida for its vowels are always explicit This description is expressed in terms of an abugida Formally an alphasyllabary that is not an abugida can be converted to an abugida by adding a purely formal vowel sound that is never used and declaring that to be the inherent vowel of the letters representing consonants This may formally make the system ambiguous but in practice this is not a problem for then the interpretation with the never used inherent vowel sound will always be a wrong interpretation The actual pronunciation may be complicated by interactions between the sounds apparently written just as the sounds of the letters in the English words wan gem and war are affected by neighbouring letters The fundamental principles of an abugida apply to words made up of consonant vowel CV syllables The syllables are written as a linear sequences of the units of the script Each syllable is either a letter that represents the sound of a consonant and its inherent vowel or a letter modified to indicate the vowel either by means of diacritics or by changes in the form of the letter itself If all modifications are by diacritics and all diacritics follow the direction of the writing of the letters then the abugida is not an alphasyllabary However most languages have words that are more complicated than a sequence of CV syllables even ignoring tone The first complication is syllables that consist of just a vowel V This issue does not arise in some languages because every syllable starts with a consonant This is common in Semitic languages and in languages of mainland SE Asia for such languages this issue need not arise For some languages a zero consonant letter is used as though every syllable began with a consonant For other languages each vowel has a separate letter that is used for each syllable consisting of just the vowel These letters are known as independent vowels and are found in most Indic scripts These letters may be quite different from the corresponding diacritics which by contrast are known as dependent vowels As a result of the spread of writing systems independent vowels may be used to represent syllables beginning with a glottal stop even for non initial syllables The next two complications are sequences of consonants before a vowel CCV and syllables ending in a consonant CVC The simplest solution which is not always available is to break with the principle of writing words as a sequence of syllables and use a unit representing just a consonant C This unit may be represented with a modification that explicitly indicates the lack of a vowel virama a lack of vowel marking often with ambiguity between no vowel and a default inherent vowel vowel marking for a short or neutral vowel such as schwa with ambiguity between no vowel and that short or neutral vowel or a visually unrelated letter In a true abugida the lack of distinctive marking may result from the diachronic loss of the inherent vowel e g by syncope and apocope in Hindi When not handled by decomposition into C CV CCV syllables are handled by combining the two consonants In the Indic scripts the earliest method was simply to arrange them vertically but the two consonants may merge as a conjunct consonant letters where two or more letters are graphically joined in a ligature or otherwise change their shapes Rarely one of the consonants may be replaced by a gemination mark e g the Gurmukhi addak When they are arranged vertically as in Burmese or Khmer they are said to be stacked Often there has been a change to writing the two consonants side by side In the latter case the fact of combination may be indicated by a diacritic on one of the consonants or a change in the form of one of the consonants e g the half forms of Devanagari Generally the reading order is top to bottom or the general reading order of the script but sometimes the order is reversed The division of a word into syllables for the purposes of writing does not always accord with the natural phonetics of the language For example Brahmic scripts commonly handle a phonetic sequence CVC CV as CV CCV or CV C CV However sometimes phonetic CVC syllables are handled as single units and the final consonant may be represented in much the same way as the second consonant in CCV e g in the Tibetan citation needed Khmer 12 and Tai Tham 13 scripts The positioning of the components may be slightly different as in Khmer and Tai Tham by a special dependent consonant sign which may be a smaller or differently placed version of the full consonant letter or may be a distinct sign altogether not at all For example repeated consonants need not be represented homorganic nasals may be ignored and in Philippine scripts the syllable final consonant was traditionally never represented 14 More complicated unit structures e g CC or CCVC are handled by combining the various techniques above Family specific features EditThere are three principal families of abugidas depending on whether vowels are indicated by modifying consonants by diacritics distortion or orientation 15 The oldest and largest is the Brahmic family of India and Southeast Asia in which vowels are marked with diacritics and syllable final consonants when they occur are indicated with ligatures diacritics or with a special vowel canceling mark In the Ethiopic family vowels are marked by modifying the shapes of the consonants and one of the vowel forms serves additionally to indicate final consonants In Canadian Aboriginal syllabics vowels are marked by rotating or flipping the consonants and final consonants are indicated with either special diacritics or superscript forms of the main initial consonants Lao and Tana have dependent vowels and a zero vowel sign but no inherent vowel Feature North Indic South Indic Tana Ethiopic Canadian AboriginalVowel representationafter consonant Dependent sign diacritic in distinct position per vowel Fused diacritic Rotate reflectInitial vowelrepresentation Distinct inlineletter per vowel a Glottal stop or zero consonantplus dependent vowel b Glottal stopplus dependent Zero consonantplus dependentInherent vowel value of no vowel sign e ɔ a or o c No ɐ 17 N AZero vowel sign sign for no value Often Always used whenno final vowel d Ambiguous with e ɨ Shrunk or separate letter e Consonant cluster Conjunct f Stacked or separate clarification needed g SeparateFinal consonant not sign Inline h Inline InlineDistinct final sign Only for ṃ ḥ i j No Only in WesternFinal sign position Inline or top Inline top or occasionally bottom N A Raised or inline clarification needed Exceptions Tibetan Rong and Kharoṣṭhi use the glottal stop or zero consonant plus dependent vowel Pali in the Burmese Khmer and Tai Tham scripts uses independent vowels instead and they are also used in loan words in the local languages The Cham script also uses both independent vowels and glottal stop consonant plus dependent vowel 16 In all three cases the glottal stop letter is the same as the independent vowel letter for the inherent vowel Conversely the Lontara script of Sulawesi uses zero consonant plus vowel Lao has no inherent vowel it is an alphasyllabary but not an abugida There is also a Thai script Pali orthography which has no inherent vowel The Thai Lao Tai Viet Tai Tham and Khmer scripts often or always use the plain letter for word final consonants and normally do not use a zero vowel sign However the Thai script regularly uses it for Pali and Sanskrit Deviations include omissions citation needed and systematic use of i forms citation needed Often separate and unmodified as a result of syncope Also as a legitimate font fall back can occur as side by side consonants modified only by the inclusion of a virama Tamil and Lao have conjuncts formed from straightforward ligation of side by side consonants Burmese and Tai Tham have a few conjuncts Tibetan and Khmer occasionally and Tai Tham regularly write final consonants below the rest of the akshara This practice is the origin of the Lao letter ຽ U 0EBD LAO SEMIVOWEL SIGN NYO and a similar sign may be found in Javanese Tai Tham may also write several final consonants above the rest of the akshara The Ronɡ script writes final consonants above the rest of the akshara except that final ŋ precedes the rest The Philippine scripts do not represent final consonants The symbol for ṃ represents the sound for m or ŋ in some languages and the symbol for ḥ may represent a ɡlottal stop or even k Not all scripts have these symbols Tai Tham has superscript and subscript signs for final k Javanese and related scripts have a superscript symbol for final r though it is ultimately related to the normal letter for r Indic Brahmic Edit See also Brahmic scripts Indic scripts originated in India and spread to Southeast Asia Bangladesh Sri Lanka Nepal Bhutan Tibet Mongolia and Russia All surviving Indic scripts are descendants of the Brahmi alphabet Today they are used in most languages of South Asia although replaced by Perso Arabic in Urdu Kashmiri and some other languages of Pakistan and India mainland Southeast Asia Myanmar Thailand Laos Cambodia and Vietnam Tibet Tibetan Indonesian archipelago Javanese Balinese Sundanese Philippines Baybayin Buhid Hanunuo Kulitan and Aborlan Tagbanwa Malaysia Rencong etc The primary division is with North Indic scripts used in Northern India Nepal Tibet Bhutan Mongolia and Russia and Southern Indic scripts used in South India Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia South Indic letter forms are more rounded than North Indic forms though Odia Golmol and Litumol of Nepal script are rounded Most North Indic scripts full letters incorporate a horizontal line at the top with Gujarati and Odia as exceptions South Indic scripts do not Indic scripts indicate vowels through dependent vowel signs diacritics around the consonants often including a sign that explicitly indicates the lack of a vowel If a consonant has no vowel sign this indicates a default vowel Vowel diacritics may appear above below to the left to the right or around the consonant The most widely used Indic script is Devanagari shared by Hindi Bihari Marathi Konkani Nepali and often Sanskrit A basic letter such as क in Hindi represents a syllable with the default vowel in this case ka ke In some languages including Hindi it becomes a final closing consonant at the end of a word in this case k The inherent vowel may be changed by adding vowel mark diacritics producing syllables such as क ki क ku क ke क ko A 19th century manuscript in the Devanagari script Diacritic placement in Brahmic abugidas position syllable pronunciation base form scriptabove क keː क k a Devanagaribelow क ku left क ki right क koː around க kau க ka Tamilsurround ក kie ក kɑː Khmerwithin ಕ ki ಕ ka Kannadawithin క ki క ka Telugubelow and extendto the right ꦏ kja ꦏ ka Javanesebelow and extendto the left ꦏ kru In many of the Brahmic scripts a syllable beginning with a cluster is treated as a single character for purposes of vowel marking so a vowel marker like i falling before the character it modifies may appear several positions before the place where it is pronounced For example the game cricket in Hindi is क र क ट cricket the diacritic for i appears before the consonant cluster kr not before the r A more unusual example is seen in the Batak alphabet Here the syllable bim is written ba ma i virama That is the vowel diacritic and virama are both written after the consonants for the whole syllable In many abugidas there is also a diacritic to suppress the inherent vowel yielding the bare consonant In Devanagari क is k and ल is l This is called the virama or halantam in Sanskrit It may be used to form consonant clusters or to indicate that a consonant occurs at the end of a word Thus in Sanskrit a default vowel consonant such as क does not take on a final consonant sound Instead it keeps its vowel For writing two consonants without a vowel in between instead of using diacritics on the first consonant to remove its vowel another popular method of special conjunct forms is used in which two or more consonant characters are merged to express a cluster such as Devanagari क ल kla Some fonts display this as क followed by ल rather than forming a conjunct This expedient is used by ISCII and South Asian scripts of Unicode Thus a closed syllable such as kal requires two aksharas to write The Rong script used for the Lepcha language goes further than other Indic abugidas in that a single akshara can represent a closed syllable Not only the vowel but any final consonant is indicated by a diacritic For example the syllable sok would be written as something like s here with an underring representing o and an overcross representing the diacritic for final k Most other Indic abugidas can only indicate a very limited set of final consonants with diacritics such as ŋ or r if they can indicate any at all Ethiopic Edit The Ge ez script an abugida of Eritrea and Ethiopia In Ethiopic or Ge ez script fidels individual letters of the script have diacritics that are fused with the consonants to the point that they must be considered modifications of the form of the letters Children learn each modification separately as in a syllabary nonetheless the graphic similarities between syllables with the same consonant are readily apparent unlike the case in a true syllabary Though now an abugida the Ge ez script until the advent of Christianity ca AD 350 had originally been what would now be termed an abjad In the Ge ez abugida or fidel the base form of the letter also known as fidel may be altered For example ሀ ha he base form ሁ hu with a right side diacritic that does not alter the letter ሂ hi with a subdiacritic that compresses the consonant so it is the same height ህ he hɨ or h where the letter is modified with a kink in the left arm Canadian Aboriginal syllabics Edit In the family known as Canadian Aboriginal syllabics which was inspired by the Devanagari script of India vowels are indicated by changing the orientation of the syllabogram Each vowel has a consistent orientation for example Inuktitut ᐱ pi ᐳ pu ᐸ pa ᑎ ti ᑐ tu ᑕ ta Although there is a vowel inherent in each all rotations have equal status and none can be identified as basic Bare consonants are indicated either by separate diacritics or by superscript versions of the aksharas there is no vowel killer mark Borderline cases EditVowelled abjads Edit Consonantal scripts abjads are normally written without indication of many vowels However in some contexts like teaching materials or scriptures Arabic and Hebrew are written with full indication of vowels via diacritic marks harakat niqqud making them effectively alphasyllabaries The Brahmic and Ethiopic families are thought to have originated from the Semitic abjads by the addition of vowel marks The Arabic scripts used for Kurdish in Iraq and for Uyghur in Xinjiang China as well as the Hebrew script of Yiddish are fully vowelled but because the vowels are written with full letters rather than diacritics with the exception of distinguishing between a and o in the latter and there are no inherent vowels these are considered alphabets not abugidas Phagspa Edit The imperial Mongol script called Phagspa was derived from the Tibetan abugida but all vowels are written in line rather than as diacritics However it retains the features of having an inherent vowel a and having distinct initial vowel letters Pahawh Edit Pahawh Hmong is a non segmental script that indicates syllable onsets and rimes such as consonant clusters and vowels with final consonants Thus it is not segmental and cannot be considered an abugida However it superficially resembles an abugida with the roles of consonant and vowel reversed Most syllables are written with two letters in the order rime onset typically vowel consonant even though they are pronounced as onset rime consonant vowel rather like the position of the i vowel in Devanagari which is written before the consonant Pahawh is also unusual in that while an inherent rime au with mid tone is unwritten it also has an inherent onset k For the syllable kau which requires one or the other of the inherent sounds to be overt it is au that is written Thus it is the rime vowel that is basic to the system citation needed Meroitic Edit It is difficult to draw a dividing line between abugidas and other segmental scripts For example the Meroitic script of ancient Sudan did not indicate an inherent a one symbol stood for both m and ma for example and is thus similar to Brahmic family of abugidas However the other vowels were indicated with full letters not diacritics or modification so the system was essentially an alphabet that did not bother to write the most common vowel Shorthand Edit Several systems of shorthand use diacritics for vowels but they do not have an inherent vowel and are thus more similar to Thaana and Kurdish script than to the Brahmic scripts The Gabelsberger shorthand system and its derivatives modify the following consonant to represent vowels The Pollard script which was based on shorthand also uses diacritics for vowels the placements of the vowel relative to the consonant indicates tone Pitman shorthand uses straight strokes and quarter circle marks in different orientations as the principal alphabet of consonants vowels are shown as light and heavy dots dashes and other marks in one of 3 possible positions to indicate the various vowel sounds However to increase writing speed Pitman has rules for vowel indication 18 using the positioning or choice of consonant signs so that writing vowel marks can be dispensed with Development EditAs the term alphasyllabary suggests abugidas have been considered an intermediate step between alphabets and syllabaries Historically abugidas appear to have evolved from abjads vowelless alphabets They contrast with syllabaries where there is a distinct symbol for each syllable or consonant vowel combination and where these have no systematic similarity to each other and typically develop directly from logographic scripts Compare the examples above to sets of syllables in the Japanese hiragana syllabary か ka き ki く ku け ke こ ko have nothing in common to indicate k while ら ra り ri る ru れ re ろ ro have neither anything in common for r nor anything to indicate that they have the same vowels as the k set Most Indian and Indochinese abugidas appear to have first been developed from abjads with the Kharoṣṭhi and Brahmi scripts the abjad in question is usually considered to be the Aramaic one but while the link between Aramaic and Kharosthi is more or less undisputed this is not the case with Brahmi The Kharosthi family does not survive today but Brahmi s descendants include most of the modern scripts of South and Southeast Asia Ge ez derived from a different abjad the Sabean script of Yemen the advent of vowels coincided with the introduction or adoption of Christianity about AD 350 17 The Ethiopic script is the elaboration of an abjad The Cree syllabary was invented with full knowledge of the Devanagari system The Meroitic script was developed from Egyptian hieroglyphs within which various schemes of group writing 19 had been used for showing vowels List of abugidas EditFor a more complete list see List of writing systems Brahmic family descended from Brahmi c 6th century BC Ahom Assamese Balinese Batak Toba and other Batak languages Baybayin Ilocano Pangasinan Tagalog Bikol languages Visayan languages and possibly other Philippine languages Bengali 20 Bengali Bhaiksuki Brahmi Sanskrit Prakrit Buhid Burmese Burmese Karen languages Mon and Shan Chakma Cham Devanagari Hindi Sanskrit Marathi Nepali Konkani and other languages of northern India Dhives Akuru Grantha Sanskrit Gujarati Gujarati Kachchi Gurmukhi script Punjabi Hanuno o Javanese Kaganga Lampung Rencong Rejang Kaithi Bhojpuri and other languages of northern and eastern India Kannada Kannada Tulu Konkani Kodava Kawi Khmer Khojki Khotanese Khudawadi Kolezhuthu Tamil Malayalam Kulitan Lao Leke Lepcha Limbu Lontara Buginese Makassar and Mandar Mahajani Malayalam Malayalam Malayanma Malayalam Marchen Zhang Zhung Meetei Mayek Meroitic Modi Marathi Multani Saraiki Nandinagari Sanskrit Newar Nepal Bhasa Sanskrit New Tai Lue Odia Pallava script Tamil Sanskrit various Prakrits Phags pa Mongolian Chinese and other languages of the Yuan dynasty Mongol Empire Ranjana Nepal Bhasa Sanskrit Sharada Sanskrit Siddham Sanskrit Sinhala Sourashtra Soyombo Sundanese Sylheti Nagri Sylheti language Tagbanwa Palawan languages Tai Dam Tai Le Tai Tham Khun and Northern Thai Takri Tamil Telugu Thai Tibetan Tigalari Sanskrit Tulu Tirhuta Maithili Tocharian Vatteluttu Tamil Malayalam Zanabazar Square Zhang zhung scripts Kharoṣṭhi from the 3rd century BC Ge ez from the 4th century AD Canadian Aboriginal syllabics Cree Ojibwe syllabics Blackfoot syllabics Carrier syllabics Inuktitut syllabics Pollard script Pitman shorthandFictional Edit Tengwar Ihathve Sabethired 21 Abugida like scripts Edit Meroitic an alphabet with an inherent vowel Meroitic Old Nubian possibly Thaana abugida with no inherent vowel References Edit Fevrier James Germain 1948 Le Neosyllabisme Histoire de l ecriture Payot pp 333 383 Diringer David 1948 The Alphabet A Key to the History of Mankind Philosophical Library pp 601 index Householder F 1959 Review of The Decipherment of Linear B by John Chadwick The Classical Journal 54 8 379 383 Retrieved 30 September 2020 from http www jstor org stable 3294984 Daniels P 1990 Fundamentals of Grammatology Journal of the American Oriental Society 110 4 727 731 doi 10 2307 602899 We must recognize that the West Semitic scripts constitute a third fundamental type of script the kind that denotes individual consonants only It cannot be subsumed under either of the other terms A suitable name for this type would be alephbeth in honor of its Levantine origin but this term seems too similar to alphabet to be practical so I propose to call this type an abjad Footnote I e the alif ba jim order familiar from earlier Semitic alphabets from which the modern order alif ba ta tha is derived by placing together the letters with similar shapes and differing numbers of dots The abjad is the order in which numerical values are assigned to the letters as in Hebrew from the Arabic word for the traditional order6 of its script which unvocalized of course falls in this category There is yet a fourth fundamental type of script a type recognized over forty years ago by James Germain Fevrier called by him the neosyllabary 1948 330 and again by Fred Householder thirty years ago who called it pseudo alphabet 1959 382 These are the scripts of Ethiopia and greater India that use a basic form for the specific syllable consonant a particular vowel in practice always the unmarked a and modify it to denote the syllables with other vowels or with no vowel Were it not for this existing term I would propose maintaining the pattern by calling this type an abugida from the Ethiopian word for the auxiliary order of consonants in the signary a b c William Bright 2000 65 66 A Matter of Typology Alphasyllabaries and Abugidas In Studies in the Linguistic Sciences Volume 30 Number 1 pages 63 71 Amalia E Gnanadesikan 2017 Towards a typology of phonemic scripts Writing Systems Research 9 1 14 35 DOI 10 1080 17586801 2017 1308239 The second is that of Bright 1996 1999 which follows Daniels in abjads and alphabets Bright 1999 but identifies instead of abugidas a category of alphasyllabaries As Bright 1999 points out the definition of abugida and the definition of alpha syllabary differ This fact alone suggests that at least one of the two classifications is either incom plete or inaccurate or at the very least that they have two different purposes This paper is intended as a long delayed response to Bright 1999 and argues that both of these systems are in fact incomplete Littera ex occidente Toward a Functional History of Writing Peter T Daniels in STUDIES IN SEMITIC AND AFROASIATIC LINGUISTICS PRESENTED TO GENE B GRAGG Edited by CYNTHIA L MILLER pages 53 69 Alongside the terms I rejected neosyllabary Fevrier 1948 pseudo alphabet Householder 1959 semisyllabary Diringer 1948 and alphasyllabary Bright 1992 because they imply exactly the notion I am trying to refute that the abugida is a kind of alphabet or a kind of syllabary I have just come across semialphabet in the Encyclopœdia Britannica Micropœdia though what is intended by the distinction the syllabic KharoœoI sic and semialphabetic BrWhmI s v Indic Writing Systems is unfathomable W Bright denies having devised the term alphasyllabary but it has not yet been found to occur earlier than his 1992 encyclopedia in 1990 136 he approved semisyllabary Compare Daniels 1996b 4 n and Bright 2000 for the different conceptualizations of abugida and alphasyllabary functional vs formal as it happens The words abjad and abugida are simply words in Arabic and Ethiopic respectively for the ancient Northwest Semitic order of letters which is used in those languages in certain functions alongside the customary orders in Arabic reflecting rearrangement according to shape and in Ethiopic reflecting an entirely different letter order tradition Amalia E Gnanadesikan 2017 Towards a typology of phonemic scripts Writing Systems Research 9 1 14 35 DOI 10 1080 17586801 2017 1308239 This type of script has been given many names among them semi alphabet Diringer 1948 referring to Brahmi semi syllabary Diringer 1948 referring to Devanagari or semi syllabic script Baker 1997 syllabic alphabet Coulmas 1999 alphasyllabary Bright 1996 1999 Trigger 2004 neosyllabary Daniels 1990 abugida Daniels 1996a and segmentally coded syllabically linear phonographic script Faber 1992 as well as the Sanskrit inspired terms aksara system Gnanadesikan 2009 or aksharik script Rimzhim Katz amp Fowler 2014 As is discussed further below however there is a considerable degree of typological diversity in this family of scripts Daniels Peter T October December 1990 Fundamentals of Grammatology Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 4 727 731 doi 10 2307 602899 JSTOR 602899 He describes this term as formal i e more concerned with graphic arrangement of symbols whereas abugida was functional putting the focus on sound symbol correspondence However this is not a distinction made in the literature a b c Glossary of Daniels amp Bright 1996 The World s Writing Systems The Unicode Standard Version 8 0 PDF August 2015 Section 16 4 Khmer Subscript Consonants Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Everson Michael Hosken Martin 6 August 2006 Proposal for encoding the Lanna script in the BMP of the UCS PDF Working Group Document International Organization for Standardization Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Joel C Kuipers amp Ray McDermott Insular Southeast Asian Scripts In Daniels amp Bright 1996 The World s Writing Systems John D Berry 2002 19 Language Culture Type Everson Michael 6 August 2006 Proposal for encoding the Cham script in the BMP of the UCS PDF Unicode Consortium Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 a b Getatchew Haile Ethiopic Writing In Daniels amp Bright 1996 The World s Writing Systems The Joy of Pitman Shorthand pitmanshorthand homestead com James Hoch 1994 Semitic Words in Egyptian Texts of the New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Periods ScriptSource Bengali Bangla scriptsource org Retrieved 9 May 2019 Ihathve Sabethired omniglot com External links EditSyllabic alphabets Omniglot s list of abugidas including examples of various writing systems Alphabets list of abugidas and other scripts in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abugida amp oldid 1137354264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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