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Coptic script

The Coptic script is the script used for writing the Coptic language, the latest stage of Egyptian. The repertoire of glyphs is based on the uncial Greek alphabet, augmented by letters borrowed from the Egyptian Demotic. It was the first alphabetic script used for the Egyptian language. There are several Coptic alphabets, as the script varies greatly among the various dialects and eras of the Coptic language.

Coptic script
Script type
Time period
2nd century A.D.[1] to present (in Coptic liturgy)
DirectionLeft-to-right 
LanguagesCoptic language
Related scripts
Parent systems
Child systems
Old Nubian
ISO 15924
ISO 15924Copt (204), ​Coptic
Unicode
Unicode alias
Coptic
  • U+2C80–U+2CFF Coptic
  • U+0370–U+03FF Greek and Coptic
  • U+102E0–U+102FF Coptic Epact Numbers
 This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For the distinction between [ ], / / and  , see IPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.

History edit

 
The letters of the Coptic script, not including soou

The Coptic script has a long history going back to the Ptolemaic Kingdom, when the Greek alphabet was used to transcribe Demotic texts, with the aim of recording the correct pronunciation of Demotic. As early as the sixth century BCE and as late as the second century CE, an entire series of pre-Christian religious texts were written in what scholars term Old Coptic, Egyptian language texts written in the Greek alphabet.

In contrast to Old Coptic, seven additional Coptic letters were derived from Demotic, and many of these (though not all) are used in “true” form of Coptic writing. Coptic texts are associated with Christianity, Gnosticism, and Manichaeism.

With the spread of early Christianity in Egypt, knowledge of Egyptian hieroglyphs was lost by the late third century, as well as Demotic script slightly later, making way for a writing system more closely associated with the Coptic Orthodox Church. By the fourth century, the Coptic script was "standardized", particularly for the Sahidic dialect. (There are a number of differences between the alphabets as used in the various dialects in Coptic).

Coptic is not generally used today except by the members of the Coptic Orthodox Church to write their religious texts. All the Gnostic codices found at Nag Hammadi used the Coptic script.

The Old Nubian alphabet—used to write Old Nubian, a Nilo-Saharan language—is an uncial variant of the Coptic script, with additional characters borrowed from the Greek and Meroitic scripts.

Form edit

The Coptic script was the first Egyptian writing system to indicate vowels, making Coptic documents invaluable for the interpretation of earlier Egyptian texts. Some Egyptian syllables had sonorants but no vowels; in Sahidic, these were written in Coptic with a line above the entire syllable. Various scribal schools made limited use of diacritics: some used an apostrophe as a word divider and to mark clitics, a function of determinatives in logographic Egyptian; others used diereses over and to show that these started a new syllable, others a circumflex over any vowel for the same purpose.[2]

The Coptic script's glyphs are largely based on the Greek alphabet, another help in interpreting older Egyptian texts,[3] with 24 letters of Greek origin; 6 or 7 more were retained from Demotic, depending on the dialect (6 in Sahidic, another each in Bohairic and Akhmimic).[2] In addition to the alphabetic letters, the letter ϯ stood for the syllable /te/ or /de/.

As the Coptic script is simply a typeface of the Greek alphabet,[4] with a few added letters, it can be used to write Greek without any transliteration schemes. Latin equivalents would include the Icelandic alphabet (which likewise has added letters), or the Fraktur alphabet (which has distinctive forms). While initially unified with the Greek alphabet by Unicode, a proposal was later accepted to separate it, with the proposal noting that Coptic is never written using modern Greek letter-forms (unlike German, which may be written with Fraktur or Roman Antiqua letter-forms), and that the Coptic letter-forms have closer mutual legibility with the Greek-based letters incorporated into the separately encoded Cyrillic alphabet than with the forms used in modern Greek. Because Coptic lowercases are usually small-caps forms of the capitals, a Greek would have little trouble reading Coptic letters, but Copts would struggle more with many of the Greek letters.[5][6]

Letters edit

These are the letters that are used for writing the Coptic language. The distinction between capital and lowercase is a modern invention.

Uppercase (image) Lowercase (image) Uppercase (unicode) Lowercase (unicode) Numeric value Letter Name[7] Greek equiv. Translit. Sahidic pron.[8] Bohairic pron.[8] Late Coptic pron.[9] Greco-Bohairic pron.[10]
    1 Alpha Α, α A /a/ /æ/, /ɑ/ /ä/
   
[note 1]
2 Beta Β, β B/V /β/ /β/
(final [b])
/w/
(final [b])
/b/, (/v/ before a vowel [except in a name])
    3 Gamma Γ, γ G/Gh/NG /k/
(marked Greek words)
/g/, ( /ɣ/ before ⲁ, ⲟ, or ⲱ) /ɣ/, /g/ (before // or /i/), /ŋ/ (before /g/ or /k/)
    4 Delta Δ, δ TH/D /t/
(marked Greek words)
/d/
(marked Greek words)
/ð/, (/d/ in a name)
    5 Eey Ε, ε E /ɛ/, /ə/
(ⲉⲓ = //, /j/)
/ɛ/, /ə/
(ⲓⲉ = /e/)
/æ/, /ɑ/
(ⲓⲉ = /e/)
//
    6 Soou ϛ
Ϛ, ϛ*
( ,  )
(none)

/dz/

    7 Zeta Ζ, ζ Z /s/
(marked Greek words)
/z/
(marked Greek words)
/z/
    8 Eta Η, η EE // /e/ /æ/, /ɑ/, /ɪ/ //
    9 Theta Θ, θ Th/T /th/ // /t/ /θ/
    10 Iota Ι, ι I/J/Y //, /j/ /i/, /j/, /ə/
(ⲓⲉ = /e/)
/ɪ/, /j/
(ⲓⲉ = /e/)
/i/, /j/ (before vowels), /ɪ/ (after vowels to form diphthongs)
    20 Kappa Κ, κ K /k/ //, /k/ /k/
    30 Lola Λ, λ L /l/
    40 Mey Μ, μ M /m/
    50 Ney Ν, ν N /n/
    60 Exi Ξ, ξ X /ks/
(only in Greek loanwords)
/ks/, [ks] (usually following a consonant, or sometimes when starting a word)
    70 O Ο, ο O /ɔ/ (ⲟⲩ = //, /w/) /o/ (ⲟⲩ = /u/, /w/) // (ⲟⲩ = /u/)
    80 Pi Π, π P /p/ /b/ /p/
    100 Roo Ρ, ρ R /ɾ/~/r/
    200 Seema Σ, σ, ς S/C /s/
    300 Tau Τ, τ T/D /t/ //, /t/ /d/
(final [t])
/t/
    400 Upsilon Υ, υ U/V/Y /w/ (ⲟⲩ = //, /w/) /ɪ/, /w/ (ⲟⲩ = /u/, /w/) /i/, /w/ (between "" and another vowel except ""), /v/ (after /ɑ/ ( or // ()), /u/ (digraph "ⲟⲩ")
    500 Phi Φ, φ F /ph/ // /b/~/f/ /f/
    600 Chi Χ, χ K/Sh/Kh /kh/ // /k/
/k/ (if the word is Coptic in origin), /x/ (if the word is Greek in origin), /ç/ (if the word is Greek in origin but before // or /i/)
    700 Epsi Ψ, ψ PS [bs]
(only in Greek loanwords)
[ps], [ps] (usually following a consonant)
    800 Oou Ω, ω O/W // /o/ // /o̞ː/
    Ϣ ϣ Shai (none) Sh /ʃ/
    Ϥ ϥ 90 Fai ϙ
(numerical value)
F /f/
    Ϧ (Ⳉ) ϧ (ⳉ)
[note 2]
Khai (none) Kh/Q NA /x/
    Ϩ ϩ Hori (none) H /h/
    Ϫ ϫ
[note 3]
Janja (none) G/J /t͡ʃ/ /t͡ʃʼ/, /t͡ʃ/ /ɟ/ /g/, // (before // or /i/)
    Ϭ ϭ
[note 3]
Cheema (none) C/Ch // /t͡ʃʰ/ /ʃ/ //, [] (usually following a consonant)
    Ϯ ϯ
[note 4]
Ti (none) Ti /t/ /i/, /ti/, /tə/ /di/ /ti/
    900 Sampi Ϡ,ϡ
(numerical value)
  1. ^ seemed to have retained a [β] intervocalically in Late Coptic.
  2. ^ Akhmimic dialect uses the letter for /x/. No name is recorded.
  3. ^ a b Ϫ and ϭ seemed to have merged in Late Coptic into one phoneme, /ʃ/, with [ɟ] intervocalically.
  4. ^ When part of the digraph ϯⲉ, it is pronounced [de] in Bohairic.

Letters derived from Demotic edit

In Old Coptic, there were a large number of Demotic Egyptian characters, including some logograms. They were soon reduced to half a dozen, for sounds not covered by the Greek alphabet. The following letters remained:

Hieroglyph   Hieratic   Demotic   Coptic Translit. Late Coptic pron.
    Ϣ
š
/ʃ/
    Ϥ
f
/f/
    Ϧ
x
/x/

    Ϩ
h
/h/
    Ϫ
j
/ɟ/
    Ϭ
c
/ʃ/

    Ϯ
di
/di/

Numerals edit

Coptic numerals are an alphabetic numeral system in which numbers are indicated with letters of the alphabet, such as for 500.[11] The numerical value of the letters is based on Greek numerals. Sometimes numerical use is distinguished from text with a continuous overline above the letters, as with Greek and Cyrillic numerals.

Unicode edit

In Unicode, most Coptic letters formerly shared codepoints with similar Greek letters, but a disunification was accepted for version 4.1, which appeared in 2005. The new Coptic block is U+2C80 to U+2CFF. Most fonts contained in mainstream operating systems use a distinctive Byzantine style for this block. The Greek block includes seven Coptic letters (U+03E2–U+03EF highlighted below) derived from Demotic, and these need to be included in any complete implementation of Coptic.

Greek and Coptic[1][2]
Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+037x Ͱ ͱ Ͳ ͳ ʹ ͵ Ͷ ͷ ͺ ͻ ͼ ͽ ; Ϳ
U+038x ΄ ΅ Ά · Έ Ή Ί Ό Ύ Ώ
U+039x ΐ Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ Ν Ξ Ο
U+03Ax Π Ρ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω Ϊ Ϋ ά έ ή ί
U+03Bx ΰ α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο
U+03Cx π ρ ς σ τ υ φ χ ψ ω ϊ ϋ ό ύ ώ Ϗ
U+03Dx ϐ ϑ ϒ ϓ ϔ ϕ ϖ ϗ Ϙ ϙ Ϛ ϛ Ϝ ϝ Ϟ ϟ
U+03Ex Ϡ ϡ Ϣ ϣ Ϥ ϥ Ϧ ϧ Ϩ ϩ Ϫ ϫ Ϭ ϭ Ϯ ϯ
U+03Fx ϰ ϱ ϲ ϳ ϴ ϵ ϶ Ϸ ϸ Ϲ Ϻ ϻ ϼ Ͻ Ͼ Ͽ
Notes
1.^ As of Unicode version 15.1
2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points
Coptic[1][2]
Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+2C8x
U+2C9x
U+2CAx
U+2CBx ⲿ
U+2CCx
U+2CDx
U+2CEx
U+2CFx ⳿
Notes
1. ^ As of Unicode version 15.1
2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points
Coptic Epact Numbers[1][2]
Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+102Ex 𐋠 𐋡 𐋢 𐋣 𐋤 𐋥 𐋦 𐋧 𐋨 𐋩 𐋪 𐋫 𐋬 𐋭 𐋮 𐋯
U+102Fx 𐋰 𐋱 𐋲 𐋳 𐋴 𐋵 𐋶 𐋷 𐋸 𐋹 𐋺 𐋻
Notes
1.^ As of Unicode version 15.1
2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points

Diacritics and punctuation edit

These are also included in the Unicode specification.

Punctuation edit

  • Latin alphabet punctuation (comma, period, question mark, semicolon, colon, hyphen) uses the regular Unicode codepoints for punctuation
  • Dicolon: standard colon U+003A
  • Middle dot: U+00B7
  • En dash: U+2013
  • Em dash: U+2014
  • Slanted double hyphen: U+2E17

Combining diacritics edit

These are codepoints applied after that of the character they modify.

  • Combining overstroke: U+0305 (= supralinear stroke)
  • Combining character-joining overstroke (from middle of one character to middle of the next): U+035E
  • Combining dot under a letter: U+0323
  • Combining dot over a letter: U+0307
  • Combining overstroke: U+0323
  • Combining dot below: U+0323
  • Combining acute accent: U+0301
  • Combining grave accent: U+0300
  • Combining circumflex accent (caret shaped): U+0302
  • Combining circumflex (curved shape) or inverted breve above: U+0311
  • Combining circumflex as wide inverted breve above joining two letters: U+0361
  • Combining diaeresis: U+0308

Macrons and overlines edit

Coptic uses U+0304 ◌̄ COMBINING MACRON to indicate syllabic consonants, for example ⲛ̄.[12][13]

Coptic abbreviations use U+0305 ◌̅ COMBINING OVERLINE to draw a continuous line across the remaining letters of an abbreviated word.[13][14] It extends from the left edge of the first letter to the right edge of the last letter. For example, ⲡ̅ⲛ̅ⲁ̅, a common abbreviation for ⲡⲛⲉⲩⲙⲁ 'spirit'.

A different kind of overline uses U+FE24 ◌︤ COMBINING MACRON LEFT HALF, U+FE26 ◌︦ COMBINING CONJOINING MACRON, and U+FE25 ◌︥ COMBINING MACRON RIGHT HALF to distinguish the spelling of certain common words or to highlight proper names of divinities and heroes.[13][14] For this the line begins in the middle of the first letter and continues to the middle of the last letter. A few examples: ⲣ︤ⲙ︥, ϥ︤ⲛ︦ⲧ︥, ⲡ︤ϩ︦ⲣ︦ⲃ︥.

Sometimes numerical use of letters is indicated with a continuous line above them using U+0305 ◌̅ COMBINING OVERLINE as in ⲁ͵ⲱ̅ⲡ̅ⲏ̅ for 1,888 (where "ⲁ͵" is 1,000 and "ⲱ̅ⲡ̅ⲏ̅" is 888). Multiples of 1,000 can be indicated by a continuous double line above using U+033F ◌̿ COMBINING DOUBLE OVERLINE as in ⲁ̿ for 1,000.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Coptic alphabet/Great Russian Encyclopedia
  2. ^ a b Ritner, Robert Kriech. 1996. "The Coptic Alphabet". In The World's Writing Systems, edited by Peter T. Daniels and William Bright. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. 1994:287–290.
  3. ^ Campbell, George L. "Coptic." Compendium of the World's Writing Systems. 2nd ed. Vol. 1. Biddles LTD, 1991. 415.
  4. ^ "Coptic". Ancient Scripts. Retrieved 2 December 2017.
  5. ^ Everson, Michael; Mansour, Kamal (2002-05-08). "L2/02-205 N2444: Coptic supplementation in the BMP" (PDF).
  6. ^ For example: The composer's name "Dmitri Dmitriyevich Shostakovich" is Дмитрий Дмитриевич Шостакович in Cyrillic, and Ⲇⲙⲏⲧⲣⲓⲓ Ⲇⲙⲏⲧⲣⲓⲉⲃⲓϭ Ϣⲟⲥⲧⲁⲕⲟⲃⲓϭ in Coptic.
  7. ^ Peust (1999.59–60)
  8. ^ a b Peust (1999)
  9. ^ Before the Greco-Bohairic reforms of the mid 19th century.
  10. ^ "The Coptic Language" (PDF). Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States.
  11. ^ "Section 7.3: Coptic, Numerical Use of Letters" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. The Unicode Consortium. July 2016.
  12. ^ "Revision of the Coptic block under ballot for the BMP of the UCS" (PDF). ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG2. 2004-04-20.
  13. ^ a b c Everson, Michael; Emmel, Stephen; Marjanen, Antti; Dunderberg, Ismo; Baines, John; Pedro, Susana; Emiliano, António (2007-05-12). "N3222R: Proposal to add additional characters for Coptic and Latin to the UCS" (PDF). ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG2.
  14. ^ a b "Section 7.3: Coptic, Supralineation" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. The Unicode Consortium. July 2017.
  • Quaegebeur, Jan. 1982. "De la préhistoire de l'écriture copte." Orientalia lovaniensia analecta 13:125–136.
  • Kasser, Rodolphe. 1991. "Alphabet in Coptic, Greek". In The Coptic Encyclopedia, edited by Aziz S. Atiya. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, Volume 8. 30–32.
  • Kasser, Rodolphe. 1991. "Alphabets, Coptic". In The Coptic Encyclopedia, edited by Aziz S. Atiya. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, Volume 8. 32–41.
  • Kasser, Rodolphe. 1991. "Alphabets, Old Coptic". In The Coptic Encyclopedia, edited by Aziz S. Atiya. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, Volume 8. 41–45.
  • Wolfgang Kosack: Koptisches Handlexikon des Bohairischen. Koptisch – Deutsch – Arabisch. Verlag Christoph Brunner, Basel 2013, ISBN 978-3-9524018-9-7.

External links edit

  • Michael Everson's Revised proposal to add the Coptic alphabet to the BMP of the UCS
  • Final Proposal to Encode Coptic Epact Numbers in ISO/IEC 1064
  • Copticsounds – a resource for the study of Coptic phonology
  • Coptic Unicode input
  • Michael Everson's Antinoou: A standard font for Coptic supported by the .
  • Ifao N Copte – A professional Coptic font for researchers, students and publishers has been developed by the French institute of oriental archeology (IFAO). Unicode, Mac and Windows compatible, this free font is available through downloading from the IFAO website (direct link).
  •  ; Coptic fonts made by Laurent Bourcellier & Jonathan Perez, type designers
  • ⲡⲓⲥⲁϧⲟ 2021-03-08 at the Wayback Machine: Coptic font support 2021-01-25 at the Wayback Machine – how to install, use and manipulate Coptic ASCII and Unicode fonts
  • Download Free Coptic Fonts
  • The Coptic Alphabet (omniglot.com)
  • GNU FreeFont Coptic range in serif face

coptic, script, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Coptic script news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Coptic script is the script used for writing the Coptic language the latest stage of Egyptian The repertoire of glyphs is based on the uncial Greek alphabet augmented by letters borrowed from the Egyptian Demotic It was the first alphabetic script used for the Egyptian language There are several Coptic alphabets as the script varies greatly among the various dialects and eras of the Coptic language Coptic scriptScript typeAlphabetTime period2nd century A D 1 to present in Coptic liturgy DirectionLeft to right LanguagesCoptic languageRelated scriptsParent systemsEgyptian hieroglyphsProto SinaiticPhoenician alphabetGreek script augmented by DemoticCoptic scriptChild systemsOld NubianISO 15924ISO 15924Copt 204 CopticUnicodeUnicode aliasCopticUnicode rangeU 2C80 U 2CFF CopticU 0370 U 03FF Greek and CopticU 102E0 U 102FF Coptic Epact Numbers This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters This article contains Coptic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Coptic letters Contents 1 History 2 Form 3 Letters 3 1 Letters derived from Demotic 3 2 Numerals 4 Unicode 5 Diacritics and punctuation 5 1 Punctuation 5 2 Combining diacritics 5 3 Macrons and overlines 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp The letters of the Coptic script not including soouThe Coptic script has a long history going back to the Ptolemaic Kingdom when the Greek alphabet was used to transcribe Demotic texts with the aim of recording the correct pronunciation of Demotic As early as the sixth century BCE and as late as the second century CE an entire series of pre Christian religious texts were written in what scholars term Old Coptic Egyptian language texts written in the Greek alphabet In contrast to Old Coptic seven additional Coptic letters were derived from Demotic and many of these though not all are used in true form of Coptic writing Coptic texts are associated with Christianity Gnosticism and Manichaeism With the spread of early Christianity in Egypt knowledge of Egyptian hieroglyphs was lost by the late third century as well as Demotic script slightly later making way for a writing system more closely associated with the Coptic Orthodox Church By the fourth century the Coptic script was standardized particularly for the Sahidic dialect There are a number of differences between the alphabets as used in the various dialects in Coptic Coptic is not generally used today except by the members of the Coptic Orthodox Church to write their religious texts All the Gnostic codices found at Nag Hammadi used the Coptic script The Old Nubian alphabet used to write Old Nubian a Nilo Saharan language is an uncial variant of the Coptic script with additional characters borrowed from the Greek and Meroitic scripts Form editThe Coptic script was the first Egyptian writing system to indicate vowels making Coptic documents invaluable for the interpretation of earlier Egyptian texts Some Egyptian syllables had sonorants but no vowels in Sahidic these were written in Coptic with a line above the entire syllable Various scribal schools made limited use of diacritics some used an apostrophe as a word divider and to mark clitics a function of determinatives in logographic Egyptian others used diereses over ⲓ and ⲩ to show that these started a new syllable others a circumflex over any vowel for the same purpose 2 The Coptic script s glyphs are largely based on the Greek alphabet another help in interpreting older Egyptian texts 3 with 24 letters of Greek origin 6 or 7 more were retained from Demotic depending on the dialect 6 in Sahidic another each in Bohairic and Akhmimic 2 In addition to the alphabetic letters the letter ϯ stood for the syllable te or de As the Coptic script is simply a typeface of the Greek alphabet 4 with a few added letters it can be used to write Greek without any transliteration schemes Latin equivalents would include the Icelandic alphabet which likewise has added letters or the Fraktur alphabet which has distinctive forms While initially unified with the Greek alphabet by Unicode a proposal was later accepted to separate it with the proposal noting that Coptic is never written using modern Greek letter forms unlike German which may be written with Fraktur or Roman Antiqua letter forms and that the Coptic letter forms have closer mutual legibility with the Greek based letters incorporated into the separately encoded Cyrillic alphabet than with the forms used in modern Greek Because Coptic lowercases are usually small caps forms of the capitals a Greek would have little trouble reading Coptic letters but Copts would struggle more with many of the Greek letters 5 6 Letters editThese are the letters that are used for writing the Coptic language The distinction between capital and lowercase is a modern invention Uppercase image Lowercase image Uppercase unicode Lowercase unicode Numeric value Letter Name 7 Greek equiv Translit Sahidic pron 8 Bohairic pron 8 Late Coptic pron 9 Greco Bohairic pron 10 nbsp nbsp Ⲁ ⲁ 1 Alpha A a A a ae ɑ a nbsp nbsp Ⲃ ⲃ note 1 2 Beta B b B V b b final b w final b b v before a vowel except in a name nbsp nbsp Ⲅ ⲅ 3 Gamma G g G Gh NG k marked Greek words g ɣ before ⲁ ⲟ or ⲱ ɣ g before e or i ŋ before g or k nbsp nbsp Ⲇ ⲇ 4 Delta D d TH D t marked Greek words d marked Greek words d d in a name nbsp nbsp Ⲉ ⲉ 5 Eey E e E ɛ e ⲉⲓ iː j ɛ e ⲓⲉ e ae ɑ ⲓⲉ e e nbsp nbsp Ⲋ ⲋ 6 Soou ϛϚ ϛ nbsp nbsp none dz nbsp nbsp Ⲍ ⲍ 7 Zeta Z z Z s marked Greek words z marked Greek words z nbsp nbsp Ⲏ ⲏ 8 Eta H h EE eː e ae ɑ ɪ iː nbsp nbsp Ⲑ ⲑ 9 Theta 8 8 Th T t h tʰ t 8 nbsp nbsp Ⲓ ⲓ 10 Iota I i I J Y iː j i j e ⲓⲉ e ɪ j ⲓⲉ e i j before vowels ɪ after vowels to form diphthongs nbsp nbsp Ⲕ ⲕ 20 Kappa K k K k kʼ k k nbsp nbsp Ⲗ ⲗ 30 Lola L l L l nbsp nbsp Ⲙ ⲙ 40 Mey M m M m nbsp nbsp Ⲛ ⲛ 50 Ney N n N n nbsp nbsp Ⲝ ⲝ 60 Exi 3 3 X k s only in Greek loanwords k s e k s usually following a consonant or sometimes when starting a word nbsp nbsp Ⲟ ⲟ 70 O O o O ɔ ⲟⲩ uː w o ⲟⲩ u w o ⲟⲩ u nbsp nbsp Ⲡ ⲡ 80 Pi P p P p b p nbsp nbsp Ⲣ ⲣ 100 Roo R r R ɾ r nbsp nbsp Ⲥ ⲥ 200 Seema S s s S C s nbsp nbsp Ⲧ ⲧ 300 Tau T t T D t tʼ t d final t t nbsp nbsp Ⲩ ⲩ 400 Upsilon Y y U V Y w ⲟⲩ uː w ɪ w ⲟⲩ u w i w between ⲟ and another vowel except ⲱ v after ɑ ⲁ or e ⲉ u digraph ⲟⲩ nbsp nbsp Ⲫ ⲫ 500 Phi F f F p h pʰ b f f nbsp nbsp Ⲭ ⲭ 600 Chi X x K Sh Kh k h kʰ k k if the word is Coptic in origin x if the word is Greek in origin c if the word is Greek in origin but before e or i nbsp nbsp Ⲯ ⲯ 700 Epsi PS ps PS b s only in Greek loanwords p s e p s usually following a consonant nbsp nbsp Ⲱ ⲱ 800 Oou W w O W oː o oː o ː nbsp nbsp Ϣ ϣ Shai none Sh ʃ nbsp nbsp Ϥ ϥ 90 Fai ϙ numerical value F f nbsp nbsp Ϧ Ⳉ ϧ ⳉ note 2 Khai none Kh Q NA x nbsp nbsp Ϩ ϩ Hori none H h nbsp nbsp Ϫ ϫ note 3 Janja none G J t ʃ t ʃʼ t ʃ ɟ g dʒ before e or i nbsp nbsp Ϭ ϭ note 3 Cheema none C Ch kʲ t ʃʰ ʃ tʃ e tʃ usually following a consonant nbsp nbsp Ϯ ϯ note 4 Ti none Ti t iː tʼ i t i t e d i t i nbsp nbsp Ⳁ ⳁ 900 Sampi Ϡ ϡ numerical value Ⲃ seemed to have retained a b intervocalically in Late Coptic Akhmimic dialect uses the letter Ⳉ ⳉ for x No name is recorded a b Ϫ and ϭ seemed to have merged in Late Coptic into one phoneme ʃ with ɟ intervocalically When part of the digraph ϯⲉ it is pronounced de in Bohairic Letters derived from Demotic edit In Old Coptic there were a large number of Demotic Egyptian characters including some logograms They were soon reduced to half a dozen for sounds not covered by the Greek alphabet The following letters remained Hieroglyph Hieratic Demotic Coptic Translit Late Coptic pron nbsp nbsp Ϣ s ʃ nbsp nbsp Ϥ f f nbsp nbsp Ϧ x x nbsp nbsp Ϩ h h nbsp nbsp Ϫ j ɟ nbsp nbsp Ϭ c ʃ nbsp nbsp Ϯ di d i Numerals edit Coptic numerals are an alphabetic numeral system in which numbers are indicated with letters of the alphabet such as ⲫ for 500 11 The numerical value of the letters is based on Greek numerals Sometimes numerical use is distinguished from text with a continuous overline above the letters as with Greek and Cyrillic numerals Unicode editMain articles Greek and Coptic Unicode block Coptic Unicode block and Coptic Epact Numbers Unicode block In Unicode most Coptic letters formerly shared codepoints with similar Greek letters but a disunification was accepted for version 4 1 which appeared in 2005 The new Coptic block is U 2C80 to U 2CFF Most fonts contained in mainstream operating systems use a distinctive Byzantine style for this block The Greek block includes seven Coptic letters U 03E2 U 03EF highlighted below derived from Demotic and these need to be included in any complete implementation of Coptic Greek and Coptic 1 2 Official Unicode Consortium code chart PDF 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E FU 037x Ͱ ͱ Ͳ ͳ ʹ Ͷ ͷ ͺ ͻ ͼ ͽ ͿU 038x A E H I O Y WU 039x i A B G D E Z H 8 I K L M N 3 OU 03Ax P R S T Y F X PS W I Y a e h iU 03Bx y a b g d e z h 8 i k l m n 3 oU 03Cx p r s s t y f x ps w i y o y w ϏU 03Dx ϐ ϑ ϒ ϓ ϔ ϕ ϖ ϗ Ϙ ϙ Ϛ ϛ Ϝ ϝ Ϟ ϟU 03Ex Ϡ ϡ Ϣ ϣ Ϥ ϥ Ϧ ϧ Ϩ ϩ Ϫ ϫ Ϭ ϭ Ϯ ϯU 03Fx ϰ ϱ ϲ ϳ ϴ ϵ Ϸ ϸ Ϲ Ϻ ϻ ϼ Ͻ Ͼ ϿNotes 1 As of Unicode version 15 1 2 Grey areas indicate non assigned code pointsCoptic 1 2 Official Unicode Consortium code chart PDF 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E FU 2C8x Ⲁ ⲁ Ⲃ ⲃ Ⲅ ⲅ Ⲇ ⲇ Ⲉ ⲉ Ⲋ ⲋ Ⲍ ⲍ Ⲏ ⲏU 2C9x Ⲑ ⲑ Ⲓ ⲓ Ⲕ ⲕ Ⲗ ⲗ Ⲙ ⲙ Ⲛ ⲛ Ⲝ ⲝ Ⲟ ⲟU 2CAx Ⲡ ⲡ Ⲣ ⲣ Ⲥ ⲥ Ⲧ ⲧ Ⲩ ⲩ Ⲫ ⲫ Ⲭ ⲭ Ⲯ ⲯU 2CBx Ⲱ ⲱ Ⲳ ⲳ Ⲵ ⲵ Ⲷ ⲷ Ⲹ ⲹ Ⲻ ⲻ Ⲽ ⲽ Ⲿ ⲿU 2CCx Ⳁ ⳁ Ⳃ ⳃ Ⳅ ⳅ Ⳇ ⳇ Ⳉ ⳉ Ⳋ ⳋ Ⳍ ⳍ Ⳏ ⳏU 2CDx Ⳑ ⳑ Ⳓ ⳓ Ⳕ ⳕ Ⳗ ⳗ Ⳙ ⳙ Ⳛ ⳛ Ⳝ ⳝ Ⳟ ⳟU 2CEx Ⳡ ⳡ Ⳣ ⳣ ⳤ Ⳬ ⳬ Ⳮ ⳮ U 2CFx Ⳳ ⳳ Notes 1 As of Unicode version 15 1 2 Grey areas indicate non assigned code pointsCoptic Epact Numbers 1 2 Official Unicode Consortium code chart PDF 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E FU 102Ex U 102Fx Notes 1 As of Unicode version 15 1 2 Grey areas indicate non assigned code pointsDiacritics and punctuation editThese are also included in the Unicode specification Punctuation edit Latin alphabet punctuation comma period question mark semicolon colon hyphen uses the regular Unicode codepoints for punctuation Dicolon standard colon U 003A Middle dot U 00B7 En dash U 2013 Em dash U 2014 Slanted double hyphen U 2E17Combining diacritics edit These are codepoints applied after that of the character they modify Combining overstroke U 0305 supralinear stroke Combining character joining overstroke from middle of one character to middle of the next U 035E Combining dot under a letter U 0323 Combining dot over a letter U 0307 Combining overstroke U 0323 Combining dot below U 0323 Combining acute accent U 0301 Combining grave accent U 0300 Combining circumflex accent caret shaped U 0302 Combining circumflex curved shape or inverted breve above U 0311 Combining circumflex as wide inverted breve above joining two letters U 0361 Combining diaeresis U 0308Macrons and overlines edit Coptic uses U 0304 COMBINING MACRON to indicate syllabic consonants for example ⲛ 12 13 Coptic abbreviations use U 0305 COMBINING OVERLINE to draw a continuous line across the remaining letters of an abbreviated word 13 14 It extends from the left edge of the first letter to the right edge of the last letter For example ⲡ ⲛ ⲁ a common abbreviation for ⲡⲛⲉⲩⲙⲁ spirit A different kind of overline uses U FE24 COMBINING MACRON LEFT HALF U FE26 COMBINING CONJOINING MACRON and U FE25 COMBINING MACRON RIGHT HALF to distinguish the spelling of certain common words or to highlight proper names of divinities and heroes 13 14 For this the line begins in the middle of the first letter and continues to the middle of the last letter A few examples ⲣ ⲙ ϥ ⲛ ⲧ ⲡ ϩ ⲣ ⲃ Sometimes numerical use of letters is indicated with a continuous line above them using U 0305 COMBINING OVERLINE as in ⲁ ⲱ ⲡ ⲏ for 1 888 where ⲁ is 1 000 and ⲱ ⲡ ⲏ is 888 Multiples of 1 000 can be indicated by a continuous double line above using U 033F COMBINING DOUBLE OVERLINE as in ⲁ for 1 000 See also editCoptic pronunciation reform Institute of Coptic StudiesReferences edit Coptic alphabet Great Russian Encyclopedia a b Ritner Robert Kriech 1996 The Coptic Alphabet In The World s Writing Systems edited by Peter T Daniels and William Bright Oxford and New York Oxford University Press 1994 287 290 Campbell George L Coptic Compendium of the World s Writing Systems 2nd ed Vol 1 Biddles LTD 1991 415 Coptic Ancient Scripts Retrieved 2 December 2017 Everson Michael Mansour Kamal 2002 05 08 L2 02 205 N2444 Coptic supplementation in the BMP PDF For example The composer s name Dmitri Dmitriyevich Shostakovich is Dmitrij Dmitrievich Shostakovich in Cyrillic and Ⲇⲙⲏⲧⲣⲓⲓ Ⲇⲙⲏⲧⲣⲓⲉⲃⲓϭ Ϣⲟⲥⲧⲁⲕⲟⲃⲓϭ in Coptic Peust 1999 59 60 a b Peust 1999 Before the Greco Bohairic reforms of the mid 19th century The Coptic Language PDF Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Section 7 3 Coptic Numerical Use of Letters PDF The Unicode Standard The Unicode Consortium July 2016 Revision of the Coptic block under ballot for the BMP of the UCS PDF ISO IEC JTC1 SC2 WG2 2004 04 20 a b c Everson Michael Emmel Stephen Marjanen Antti Dunderberg Ismo Baines John Pedro Susana Emiliano Antonio 2007 05 12 N3222R Proposal to add additional characters for Coptic and Latin to the UCS PDF ISO IEC JTC1 SC2 WG2 a b Section 7 3 Coptic Supralineation PDF The Unicode Standard The Unicode Consortium July 2017 Quaegebeur Jan 1982 De la prehistoire de l ecriture copte Orientalia lovaniensia analecta 13 125 136 Kasser Rodolphe 1991 Alphabet in Coptic Greek In The Coptic Encyclopedia edited by Aziz S Atiya New York Macmillan Publishing Company Volume 8 30 32 Kasser Rodolphe 1991 Alphabets Coptic In The Coptic Encyclopedia edited by Aziz S Atiya New York Macmillan Publishing Company Volume 8 32 41 Kasser Rodolphe 1991 Alphabets Old Coptic In The Coptic Encyclopedia edited by Aziz S Atiya New York Macmillan Publishing Company Volume 8 41 45 Wolfgang Kosack Koptisches Handlexikon des Bohairischen Koptisch Deutsch Arabisch Verlag Christoph Brunner Basel 2013 ISBN 978 3 9524018 9 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coptic script Michael Everson s Revised proposal to add the Coptic alphabet to the BMP of the UCS Final Proposal to Encode Coptic Epact Numbers in ISO IEC 1064 Copticsounds a resource for the study of Coptic phonology Phonological overview of the Coptic alphabet in comparison to classical and modern Greek Coptic Unicode input Michael Everson s Antinoou A standard font for Coptic supported by the International Association for Coptic Studies Ifao N Copte A professional Coptic font for researchers students and publishers has been developed by the French institute of oriental archeology IFAO Unicode Mac and Windows compatible this free font is available through downloading from the IFAO website direct link Coptic fonts Coptic fonts made by Laurent Bourcellier amp Jonathan Perez type designers ⲡⲓⲥⲁϧⲟ Archived 2021 03 08 at the Wayback Machine Coptic font support Archived 2021 01 25 at the Wayback Machine how to install use and manipulate Coptic ASCII and Unicode fonts Download Free Coptic Fonts The Coptic Alphabet omniglot com GNU FreeFont Coptic range in serif face Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coptic script amp oldid 1205293438, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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