universal writing system AllySatis.org
The internet appears to suggest that the dream of universal communication across the barriers of language, nation, and culture by means of writing is within reach. Three centuries ago, the philosopher and mathematician
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz wrote: “As regards signs, I see … clearly that it is to the interest of the
Republic of Letters and especially of students, that learned men should reach agreement on signs.”
The world needs
a universal language. That is not to say that everyone should speak the same language. That isn't possible or desirable in this world at this time. The world needs a universal language through which people of different cultures can communicate regardless of what languages they speak.
we already have universal picture language.
Arabic numerals are the most common symbolic representation of numbers in the world.
Pasigraphie
The Chinese writing system developed more than
4,000 years ago; the oldest extant examples of written
Chinese are from the
14th or
15th cent. B.C., when the
Shang dynasty flourished.
Chinese writing consists of an individual character or ideogram for every syllable, each character representing a word or idea rather than a sound; thus, problems caused by homonyms in spoken Chinese are not a difficulty in written Chinese. The written language is a unifying factor culturally, for although the spoken languages and dialects may not be mutually comprehensible in many instances, the written form is universal.
Moderm
Japanese Korean African
Ancient Hmong
Writing systems can be conveniently classified into broad "types" depending on the way they represent their underlying languages.
Logographic
A system of this kind uses a tremendous number of signs, each to represent a morpheme. A morpheme is the minimal unit in a language that carries some meaning. So, a logogram, a
sign in a logographic system, may represent a word, or part of a word (like a suffix to denote a plural noun). Because of this, the number of signs could grow to staggering numbers like Chinese which has more than 10,
000 signs (most of them unused in everyday usage).
Chinese
Jurchen
Khitan
Mixtec
Naxi
Nushu
Tangut
Logophonetic
This is somewhat like a stripped down versions of logographic systems. In essence, there are two major types of signs, ones denoting morphemes and ones denoting sounds. Most of the logophonetic systems are logosyllabic, meaning that their phonetic signs mostly denote syllables. An exception is
Egyptian, whose phonetic signs denote consonants.
Akkadian
Aztec
Cretan Hieroglyphs
Cuneiform
Egyptian
Elamite
Epi-Olmec
Hittite
Indus Script
Japanese
Linear A
Linear B
Luwian
Maya
Sumerian
Teotihuacan
Zapotec
Syllabic
In a syllabic writing system, the overwhelming number of signs are used solely for their phonetic values. These phonetic signs are Syllabograms, meaning that they represent syllables rather than individual sound. A few non-phonetic are used for numbers, punctuation, and commonly used words.
Bengali
Brahmi
Buginese
Burmese
Byblos
Cherokee
Cree
Cypriot
Devanagari
Dhivehi
Ethiopic
Grantha
Gujarati
Gupta
Gurmukhi
hPhags-pa
Inuktitut
Javanese
Kadamba
Kalinga
Kannada
Kashmiri
Kawi
Kharosthi
Khmer
Landa
Lao
Lepcha
Malayalam
Mangyan
Meithei Mayek
Meroïtic
Modi
Nagari
Old Persian
Old Kannada
Oriya
Rejang
Sarada
South Asian Writing Systems
South Asian Writing Systems
Comparison
Sinhala
Tagalog
Takri
Tamil
Telugu
Thai
Tibetan
Tocharian
Vatteluttu
Consonantal
Alphabet or Abjad
Consonantal alphabets are also known as abjads, and are all descendents of the
Proto-Sinaitic script. In a "pure" consonantal alphabet, vowels are not written. However, nearly consonantal alphabets use certain conventions to
Arabic
Aramaic
Avestan
Berber
Hebrew
Nabataean
Old Hebrew
Pahlavi
Palmyrene
Phoenician
Proto-Sinaitic
Samaritan
Syriac
South Arabian
Thamudic
Tifinagh
Ugaritic
- published: 22 Apr 2015
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