Predominant national and selected regional or minority scripts
Abjad
Abugida
Alphabetic
[L]ogographic and [S]yllabic
Arabic
Hebrew
Tifinagh
Canadian syllabic
Ethiopic
North Indic
South Indic
Thaana
Armenian
Cyrillic
Georgian
Greek
Hangul
Latin
Mongolian
Hanzi [L]
Kana [S] / Kanji [L]
Writing systems of the world today.
This article contains special characters. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols.
This is a list of writing systems (or scripts), classified according to some common distinguishing features.
The usual name of the script is given first; the name of the language(s) in which the script is written follows (in brackets), particularly in the case where the language name differs from the script name. Other informative or qualifying annotations for the script may also be provided.
4.2.3Linear alphabets arranged into syllabic blocks
4.2.4Manual alphabets
4.2.5Other non-linear alphabets
4.3Abugidas
4.3.1Abugidas of the Brāhmī family
4.3.2Other abugidas
4.3.3Final consonant-diacritic abugidas
4.3.4Vowel-based abugidas
5List of writing systems by adoption
6Undeciphered scripts and systems that may be writing
7Undeciphered manuscripts
8Other
8.1Phonetic alphabets
8.2Special alphabets
8.2.1Tactile alphabets
8.2.2Manual alphabets
8.2.3Long-Distance Signaling
8.3Alternative alphabets
8.4Fictional writing systems
8.5For animal use
9Experimental
10See also
11Notes
12References
13External links
Pictographic/ideographic writing systems
Ideographic scripts (in which graphemes are ideograms representing concepts or ideas rather than a specific word in a language) and pictographic scripts (in which the graphemes are iconic pictures) are not thought to be able to express all that can be communicated by language, as argued by the linguists John DeFrancis and J. Marshall Unger. Essentially, they postulate that no full writing system can be completely pictographic or ideographic; it must be able to refer directly to a language in order to have the full expressive capacity of a language. Unger disputes claims made on behalf of Blissymbols in his 2004 book Ideogram.
Although a few pictographic or ideographic scripts exist today, there is no single way to read them because there is no one-to-one correspondence between symbol and language. Hieroglyphs were commonly thought to be ideographic before they were translated, and to this day, Chinese is often erroneously said to be ideographic.[1] In some cases of ideographic scripts, only the author of a text can read it with any certainty, and it may be said that they are interpreted rather than read. Such scripts often work best as mnemonic aids for oral texts or as outlines that will be fleshed out in speech.
Adinkra
Aztec script – Nahuatl (includes syllabic and logographic elements)
Birch-bark glyphs – Anishinaabemowin
Dongba – Naxi – Although this is often supplemented with syllabic Geba script.
Emoji – used in electronic messages and web pages.
Ersu Shābā – Ersu
Kaidā glyphs
Lusona
Nsibidi – Ekoi, Efik/Ibibio, Igbo
Siglas poveiras
Suckerfish script – Mi'kmawi'sit – Does have phonetic components, however.
Testerian – used for missionary work in Mexico.
There are also symbol systems used to represent things other than language, or to represent constructed languages. Some of these are:
Blissymbols – A constructed ideographic script used primarily in Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC).
iConji – A constructed ideographic script used primarily in social networking
Isotype (picture language)
A wide variety of notations
Linear B also incorporates ideograms.
Logographic writing systems
In logographic writing systems, glyphs represent words or morphemes (meaningful components of words, as in mean-ing-ful) rather than phonetic elements.
No logographic script is composed solely of logograms. All contain graphemes that represent phonetic (sound-based) elements as well. These phonetic elements may be used on their own (to represent, for example, grammatical inflections or foreign words), or may serve as phonetic complements to a logogram (used to specify the sound of a logogram that might otherwise represent more than one word). In the case of Chinese, the phonetic element is built into the logogram itself; in Egyptian and Mayan, many glyphs are purely phonetic, whereas others function as either logograms or phonetic elements, depending on context. For this reason, many such scripts may be more properly referred to as logosyllabic or complex scripts; the terminology used is largely a product of custom in the field, and is to an extent arbitrary.
Consonant-based logographies
Hieroglyphic, Hieratic, and Demotic – the writing systems of Ancient Egypt
Egyptian hieroglyphs
List of Egyptian hieroglyphs by common name
Syllable-based logographies
Anatolian hieroglyphs – Luwian
Cuneiform – Sumerian, Akkadian, other Semitic languages, Elamite, Hittite, Luwian, Hurrian, and Urartian
Chinese characters (Hanzi) – Chinese, Japanese (called Kanji), Korean (called Hanja), Vietnamese (called Chu Nom, obsolete)
Sawndip – Zhuang
Khitan large script – Khitan
Khitan small script – Khitan
Jurchen script – Jurchen
Tangut script – Tangut
Eghap (or Bagam) script
Mayan – Chorti, Yucatec, and other Classic Maya languages
Sui script – Sui language
Yi (classical) – various Yi/Lolo languages
Syllabaries
In a syllabary, graphemes represent syllables or moras. (The 19th-century term syllabics usually referred to abugidas rather than true syllabaries.)
Afaka – Ndyuka
Alaska or Yugtun script – Central Yup'ik
Bété
Cherokee – Cherokee
Cypriot – Arcadocypriot Greek
Geba – Naxi
Iban or Dunging script – Iban
Kana – Japanese (although primarily based on moras rather than syllables)
In most of these systems, some consonant-vowel combinations are written as syllables, but others are written as consonant plus vowel. In the case of Old Persian, all vowels were written regardless, so it was effectively a true alphabet despite its syllabic component. In Japanese a similar system plays a minor role in foreign borrowings; for example, [tu] is written [to]+[u], and [ti] as [te]+[i]. Paleohispanic semi-syllabaries behaved as a syllabary for the stop consonants and as an alphabet for the rest of consonants and vowels.
The Tartessian or Southwestern script is typologically intermediate between a pure alphabet and the Paleohispanic full semi-syllabaries. Although the letter used to write a stop consonant was determined by the following vowel, as in a full semi-syllabary, the following vowel was also written, as in an alphabet. Some scholars treat Tartessian as a redundant semi-syllabary, others treat it as a redundant alphabet. Zhuyin is semi-syllabic in a different sense: it transcribes half syllables. That is, it has letters for syllable onsets and rimes (kan = "k-an") rather than for consonants and vowels (kan = "k-a-n").
Bamum script – Bamum (a defective syllabary, with alphabetic principles used to fill the gaps)
Bopomofo or Zhuyin fuhao – phonetic script for the different varieties of Chinese.
Eskayan – Bohol, Philippines (a syllabary apparently based on an alphabet; some alphabetic characteristics remain)
Khom script – Bahnaric languages, including Alak and Jru'. (Onset-rime script)
Linear Elamite – Elamite language
Paleohispanic semi-syllabaries – Paleo-Hispanic languages
Celtiberian script – Celtiberian language
Northeastern Iberian script – Iberian language
Southeastern Iberian script – Iberian language
Tartessian or Southwestern script – Tartessian or Southwestern language
Old Persian cuneiform – Old Persian
Quốc Âm Tân Tự – Vietnamese (Onset-rime script)
Segmental scripts
A segmental script has graphemes which represent the phonemes (basic unit of sound) of a language.
Note that there need not be (and rarely is) a one-to-one correspondence between the graphemes of the script and the phonemes of a language. A phoneme may be represented only by some combination or string of graphemes, the same phoneme may be represented by more than one distinct grapheme, the same grapheme may stand for more than one phoneme, or some combination of all of the above.
Segmental scripts may be further divided according to the types of phonemes they typically record:
Abjads
An abjad is a segmental script containing symbols for consonants only, or where vowels are optionally written with diacritics ("pointing") or only written word-initially.
Ancient North Arabian – Dadanitic, Dumaitic, Hasaitic, Hismaic, Safaitic, Taymanitic, and Thamudic
Ancient South Arabian – Old South Arabian languages including Himyaritic, Hadhramautic, Minaean, Sabaean and Qatabanic; also the Ethiopic language Geʽez.
Aramaic, including Khwarezmian (AKA Chorasmian), Elymaic, Palmyrene, and Hatran
Arabic – Arabic, Azeri, Chittagonian (historically), Punjabi, Baluchi, Kashmiri, Pashto, Persian, Kurdish (vowels obligatory), Sindhi, Uighur (vowels obligatory), Urdu, Malay (as Jawi) and many other languages spoken in Africa and Western, Central, and Southeast Asia,
Hebrew – Hebrew and other Jewish languages
Manichaean script
Nabataean – the Nabataeans of Petra
Pahlavi script – Middle Persian
Parthian
Psalter
Phoenician – Phoenician and other Canaanite languages
Proto-Canaanite
Sogdian
Samaritan (Old Hebrew) – Aramaic, Arabic, and Hebrew
Syriac – Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Chaldean Neo-Aramaic, Syriac, Turoyo and other Neo-Aramaic languages
Tifinagh – Tuareg
Ugaritic – Ugaritic, Hurrian
True alphabets
A true alphabet contains separate letters (not diacritic marks) for both consonants and vowels.
Linear nonfeatural alphabets
Writing systems used in countries of Europe.[note 1]
Greek
Greek & Latin (Cyprus)
Latin
Latin & Cyrillic (Bosnia, Serbia, Moldova)
Cyrillic
Georgian
Latin & Armenian (Azerbaijan)
Armenian
Linear alphabets are composed of lines on a surface, such as ink on paper.
Adlam – Fula
Armenian – Armenian
Ariyaka script – Pali, Isan, Lao
Avestan – Avestan
Avoiuli – Raga
Borama – Somali
Bosančica – Bosnian
Carian – Carian
Caucasian Albanian – Caucasian Albanian
Coorgi–Cox alphabet – Kodava
Coptic – Egyptian
Cyrillic – Eastern South Slavic languages (Bulgarian and Macedonian), the Western South Slavic Serbian, Eastern Slavic languages (Belarusian, Russian, Ukrainian), the other languages of Russia, Kazakh language, Kyrgyz language, Tajik language, Mongolian language. Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan are changing to the Latin alphabet but still have considerable use of Cyrillic. See Languages using Cyrillic.
Deseret alphabet – proposed for English but never adopted
Eclectic shorthand – English
Elbasan – Albanian
Fraser – Lisu
Gabelsberger shorthand – German
Garay – Wolof and Mandinka
Georgian – Georgian and other Kartvelian languages
Gjirokastër (also called Veso Bey) – Albanian
Glagolitic – Old Church Slavonic
Gothic – Gothic
Greek – Greek, historically a variety of other languages
Hanifi – Rohingya
International Phonetic Alphabet
Kaddare – Somali
Latin AKA Roman – originally Latin language; most current western and central European languages, Turkic languages, sub-Saharan African languages, indigenous languages of the Americas, languages of maritime Southeast Asia and languages of Oceania use developments of it. Languages using a non-Latin writing system are generally also equipped with Romanization for transliteration or secondary use.
Lycian – Lycian
Lydian – Lydian
Manchu – Manchu
Mandaic – Mandaic dialect of Aramaic
Medefaidrin – also called Obɛri Ɔkaimɛ; used for the religious language of the same name
Mongolian – Mongolian
Mundari Bani – Mundari
Mru – Mru
Neo-Tifinagh – Tamazight
Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong – Hmong
N'Ko – Maninka language, Bambara, Dyula language
Oduduwa script – Yoruba
Ogham – Gaelic, Britannic, Pictish
Ol Chiki AKA Ol Cemet' or Ol Chemet' – Santali
Old Hungarian (in Hungarian magyar rovásírás or székely-magyar rovásírás) – Hungarian
Old Italic – a family of connected alphabets for the Etruscan, Oscan, Umbrian, Messapian, South Picene, Raetic, Venetic, Lepontic, Camunic languages
Old Permic (also called Abur) – Komi
Old Turkic – Old Turkic
Old Uyghur – Old Uyghur
Ol Onal – Bhumij Language
Osmanya – Somali
Pau Cin Hau script – Zomi and other Northern Kuki-Chin languages
Runes – Germanic languages
Sayaboury (also called Eebee Hmong or Ntawv Puaj Txwm) – Hmong Daw
Sorang Sompeng – Sora
Tai Lue – Lue
Tangsa – Tangsa language
Todhri – Albanian
Tolong Siki – Kurukh
Toto – Toto
Unifon – proposed for English, never adopted
Vah – Bassa
Vellara – Albanian
Vithkuqi AKA Beitha Kukju – Albanian
Wancho – Wancho
Yezidi – Kurmanji
Zaghawa – Zaghawa
Zoulai – Zou (also has alphasyllabic characteristics)
Featural linear alphabets
A featural script has elements that indicate the components of articulation, such as bilabial consonants, fricatives, or back vowels. Scripts differ in how many features they indicate.
ASL-phabet
Ditema tsa Dinoko AKA IsiBheqe SoHlamvu for Southern Bantu languages
Duployan Shorthand
Gregg Shorthand
Hangul – Korean
Osage – Osage
Shavian alphabet – proposed for English, never adopted
SignWriting and its descendants si5s and ASLwrite for sign languages
Stokoe notation for American Sign Language, and its descendant, the Hamburg Notation System or HamNoSys
Tengwar (a fictional script)
Visible Speech (a phonetic script)
Linear alphabets arranged into syllabic blocks
Hangul – Korean
Great Lakes Algonquian syllabics – Fox, Potawatomi, Ho-Chunk, Ojibwe
Manual alphabets are frequently found as parts of sign languages. They are not used for writing per se, but for spelling out words while signing.
American manual alphabet (used with slight modification in Hong Kong, Malaysia, Paraguay, Philippines , Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand)
British manual alphabet (used in some of the Commonwealth of Nations, such as Australia and New Zealand)
Catalan manual alphabet
Chilean manual alphabet
Chinese manual alphabet
Dutch manual alphabet
Ethiopian manual alphabet (an abugida)
French manual alphabet
Greek manual alphabet
Icelandic manual alphabet (also used in Denmark )
Indian manual alphabet (a true alphabet?; used in Devanagari and Gujarati areas)
International manual alphabet (used in Germany , Austria, Norway , Finland )
Iranian manual alphabet (an abjad; also used in Egypt)
Israeli manual alphabet (an abjad)
Italian manual alphabet
Korean manual alphabet
Latin American manual alphabets
Polish manual alphabet
Portuguese manual alphabet
Romanian manual alphabet
Russian manual alphabet (also used in Bulgaria and ex-Soviet states)
Spanish manual alphabet (Madrid)
Swedish manual alphabet
Yugoslav manual alphabet
Other non-linear alphabets
These are other alphabets composed of something other than lines on a surface.
Braille (Unified) – an embossed alphabet for the visually impaired, used with some extra letters to transcribe the Latin, Cyrillic, Greek, Hebrew, and Arabic alphabets, as well as Chinese
Braille (Korean)
Braille (American) (defunct)
New York Point – a defunct alternative to Braille
International maritime signal flags (both alphabetic and ideographic)
Morse code (International) – a trinary code of dashes, dots, and silence, whether transmitted by electricity, light, or sound) representing characters in the Latin alphabet.
American Morse code (defunct)
Optical telegraphy (defunct)
Flag semaphore – (made by moving hand-held flags)
Abugidas
An abugida, or alphasyllabary, is a segmental script in which vowel sounds are denoted by diacritical marks or other systematic modification of the consonants. Generally, however, if a single letter is understood to have an inherent unwritten vowel, and only vowels other than this are written, then the system is classified as an abugida regardless of whether the vowels look like diacritics or full letters. The vast majority of abugidas are found from India to Southeast Asia and belong historically to the Brāhmī family, however the term is derived from the first characters of the abugida in Ge'ez: አ (A) ቡ (bu) ጊ (gi) ዳ (da) — (compare with alphabet). Unlike abjads, the diacritical marks and systemic modifications of the consonants are not optional.
Abugidas of the Brāhmī family
A Palaung manuscript written in a Brahmic abugida
Ahom
Balinese
Batak – Toba and other Batak languages
Baybayin – Formerly used for Ilokano, Pangasinan, Tagalog, Bikol languages, Visayan languages, and possibly other Philippine languages
Bengali and Assamese — Bengali, Assamese, Meithei, Bishnupriya Manipuri
Bhaiksuki
Brahmi – Sanskrit, Prakrit
Buda – Old Sundanese and Old Javanese
Buhid
Burmese – Burmese, Karen languages, Mon, and Shan
Cham
Chakma
Devanagari – Hindi, Sanskrit, Marathi, Nepali, and many other languages of northern India
Canadian Aboriginal syllabics – Cree syllabics (for Cree), Inuktitut syllabics (for Inuktitut), Ojibwe syllabics (for Ojibwe), and various systems for other languages of Canada. Derived scripts with identical operating principles but divergent character repertoires include Carrier and Blackfoot syllabics.
Dham – Dhimal
Ge'ez – Amharic, Ge’ez, Tigrigna
Kharoṣṭhī – Gandhari, Sanskrit
Kurukh Banna – Kurukh
Lontara Bilang-bilang script – Buginese
Mandombe
Meroitic – Meroë
Mwangwego – Chewa and other Bantu languages of Malawi
Pitman Shorthand
Pollard script – Miao
Sapalo script – Oromo
Rma script – Qiang
Sunuwar AKA Jenticha
Thaana – Dhivehi
Tikamuli – Sunuwar
Thomas Natural Shorthand
Final consonant-diacritic abugidas
In at least one abugida, not only the vowel but any syllable-final consonant is written with a diacritic. That is, if representing [o] with an under-ring, and final [k] with an over-cross, [sok] would be written as s̥̽.
Róng – Lepcha
Vowel-based abugidas
In a few abugidas, the vowels are basic, and the consonants secondary. If no consonant is written in Pahawh Hmong, it is understood to be /k/; consonants are written after the vowel they precede in speech. In Japanese Braille, the vowels but not the consonants have independent status, and it is the vowels which are modified when the consonant is y or w.
Boyd's Syllabic Shorthand
Japanese Braille – Japanese
Pahawh Hmong – Hmong
List of writing systems by adoption
Name of script
Type
Population actively using (in millions)
Languages associated with
Regions using script de facto
Latin Latin
Alphabet
4900+[2][note 2]
Latin[note 3] and Romance languages (languages that evolved from Latin: Italian, French, Portuguese, Spanish and Romanian) Germanic languages (English, Dutch, German, Nordic languages)[note 4] Celtic languages (Welsh, Irish and Scottish Gaelic)[note 5] Baltic languages (Latvian and Lithuanian) Some Slavic languages (Polish, Czech, Slovak, Croatian, Slovenian) Albanian Uralic languages (Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian) Malayo-Polynesian languages (Malaysian,[note 6] Indonesian, Filipino, etc.) Turkic languages (Turkish,[note 7] Azerbaijani, Uzbek, Turkmen) Some Cushitic languages (Somali, Afar, Oromo) Bantu languages (for example: Swahili) Vietnamese (an Austroasiatic language)[note 8] others
Worldwide
Chinese 汉字 漢字
Logographic
1541[3]
Sinitic languages (Mandarin, Min, Wu, Yue, Jin, Gan, Hakka and others) Japanese (Kanji) Korean (Hanja)[note 9] Vietnamese (Chu Nom obsolete) Zhuang (Sawndip)
Eastern Asia, Singapore
Arabic العربية
Abjad or Abugida (when diacritics are used)
828[3]
Arabic (a Semitic language) Several Indo-Iranian languages (Persian, Kurdish, Urdu, Punjabi (Shahmukhi in Pakistan ), Pashto, Sindhi, Balochi, Kashmiri) Some Turkic languages (Uyghur, Kazakh (in China ), Azeri (in Iran))
Malay (in Brunei) others
Afghanistan, Algeria, Bahrain, Brunei, Chad, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Mauritania, Morocco, Libya, Oman, Pakistan , Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates and Yemen
Devanagari देवनागरी
Abugida
480.5
Hindi, Nepali, Marathi, Bhojpuri
India , Nepal and Fiji
Cyrillic Кирилица
Alphabet
289[3]
The majority of the Slavic languages (Bulgarian and Macedonian, Russian, Serbian, Belarusian, Ukrainian, others). Non-Slavic languages of the former Soviet Union, such as West- and East Caucasian languages (Abkhaz, Chechen, Avar, others), Uralic languages (Karelian, others), Iranian languages (Ossetic, Tajik, others) and Turkic language (Kyrgyz, Tatar, Azeri (formerly), and others).
Belarus , Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Russia , Serbia, Tajikistan and Ukraine
Bengali–Assamese বাংলা-অসমীয়া
Abugida
234
Some Indo-Iranian languages (Assamese, Bengali)
Bangladesh and India
Kana かな カナ
Syllabary
123
Japanese
Japan
Telugu తెలుగు
Abugida
83
Telugu
India
Hangul 한글 조선글
Alphabet, featural
81.7
Korean, Cia-Cia (an Austronesian language)
North Korea and South Korea , Indonesia
Tamil தமிழ்
Abugida
78.6
Tamil
India , Sri Lanka, Singapore
Thai ไทย
Abugida
70
Thai
Thailand
Gujarati ગુજરાતી
Abugida
57.1
Gujarati
India
Kannada ಕನ್ನಡ
Abugida
45[note 10]
Kannada (a Dravidian language)
India
Geʽez ግዕዝ
Abugida
41.85
Amharic, Tigrinya
Ethiopia, Eritrea
Burmese မြန်မာ
Abugida
39[note 11]
Burmese (a Lolo-Burmese language)
Myanmar
Malayalam മലയാളം
Abugida
38
Malayalam
India
Odia ଓଡ଼ିଆ
Abugida
35
Odia
India
Gurmukhi ਗੁਰਮੁਖੀ
Abugida
27.743
Punjabi
India
Sinhala සිංහල
Abugida
16
Sinhalese
Sri Lanka
Khmer ខ្មែរ
Abugida
16
Khmer
Cambodia
Greek Ελληνικά
Alphabet
13.5
Greek
Greece, Cyprus
Lao ລາວ
Abugida
7
Lao (a Tai language)
Laos
Hebrew עברית
Abjad (or rarely Abugida when diacritics are used)
6.5
Hebrew, Yiddish
Israel
Tibetan བོད་
Abugida
6.241
Dzongkha, Tibetan and Sikkimese
China , Bhutan, India
Armenian Հայոց
Alphabet
5.4
Armenian
Armenia
Mongolian ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ
Alphabet
5.2
Mongolian
Mongolia, China
Georgian ქართული
Alphabet
3.7
Georgian
Georgia
Meitei ꯃꯩꯇꯩ ꯃꯌꯦꯛ
Abugida
2[3]
Meitei (officially termed as "Manipuri") (a Sino-Tibetan language)
India
Thaana ދިވެހި
Abugida
0.34
Maldivian
Maldives
Canadian Syllabics ᖃᓂᐅᔮᖅᐸᐃᑦ ᒐᐦᑲᓯᓇᐦᐃᑫᐤ ᑯᖾᖹ ᖿᐟᖻ ᓱᖽᐧᖿ ᑐᑊᘁᗕᑋᗸ
Abugida
0.07[3]
Inuktitut (an Inuit language), some Algonquian languages (Cree, Iyuw Iyimuun, Innu-aimun, Anishinaabemowin, Siksika), some Athabaskan languages (Dakelh, Dene K'e, Denesuline)
Canada
Undeciphered scripts and systems that may be writing
These systems have not been deciphered. In some cases, such as Meroitic, the sound values of the glyphs are known, but the texts still cannot be read because the language is not understood. Several of these systems, such as Epi-Olmec and Indus, are claimed to have been deciphered, but these claims have not been confirmed by independent researchers. In many cases it is doubtful that they are actually writing. The Vinča symbols appear to be proto-writing, and quipu may have recorded only numerical information. There are doubts that Indus is writing, and the Phaistos Disc has so little content or context that its nature is undetermined.
Sawveh – Western Guangxi (disputed; perhaps proto-writing)
Olmec – Olmec civilization (possibly the oldest Mesoamerican script)
Para-Lydian script – Unknown language of Asia Minor; script appears related to the Lydian alphabet.
Phaistos Disc (a unique text, very possibly not writing)
Proto-Elamite – Elam (nearly as old as Sumerian)
Proto-Sinaitic (likely an abjad)
Quipu – Inca Empire (possibly numerical only)
Rongorongo – Rapa Nui (perhaps a syllabary)
Sidetic – Sidetic
Trojan script – (possibly related to Linear B)
Zapotec – Zapotec (another old Mesoamerican script)
Undeciphered manuscripts
Comparatively recent manuscripts and other texts written in undeciphered (and often unidentified) writing systems; some of these may represent ciphers of known languages or hoaxes.
Voynich manuscript
Rohonc Codex
Codex Seraphinianus
Hamptonese
Dorabella cipher
Other
Asemic writing is a writing-like form of artistic expression that generally lacks a specific semantic meaning, though it sometimes contains ideograms or pictograms.
Phonetic alphabets
This section lists alphabets used to transcribe phonetic or phonemic sound; not to be confused with spelling alphabets like the ICAO spelling alphabet. Some of these are used for transcription purposes by linguists; others are pedagogical in nature or intended as general orthographic reforms.
International Phonetic Alphabet
X-SAMPA (and original SAMPA while not covering all of IPA), is an encoding of a phonetic alphabet, i.e. IPA, using just ASCII.
Americanist phonetic notation
Uralic Phonetic Alphabet
Special alphabets
Alphabets may exist in forms other than visible symbols on a surface. Some of these are:
Tactile alphabets
Braille
Moon type
New York Point
Night writing
Manual alphabets
Fingerspelling
For example:
American Sign Language
American manual alphabet
Korean manual alphabet
Cued Speech
Long-Distance Signaling
International maritime signal flags
Morse code
Flag semaphore
Optical telegraphy
Alternative alphabets
Gregg Shorthand
Initial Teaching Alphabet
Pitman Shorthand
Quikscript
Fictional writing systems
Ath (alphabet)
Aurebesh
D'ni
Hymmnos
Klingon
On Beyond Zebra!
Scripts from The Lord of the Rings
Cirth
Sarati
Tengwar
Unown
Utopian
For animal use
Yerkish uses "lexigrams" to communicate with non-human primates.
Experimental
Aravit, a combination of the Arabic and Hebrew[4][1]
See also
Constructed script (artificial script)
Grapheme
List of creators of writing systems
List of ISO 15924 codes
List of languages by first written accounts
Unicode
Notes
↑This maps shows languages official in the respective countries; if a country has an independent breakaway republic, both languages are shown. Moldova's sole official language is Romanian (Latin-based), but the unrecognized de facto independent republic of Transnistria uses three Cyrillic-based languages: Ukrainian, Russian, and Moldovan. Georgia's official languages are Georgian and Abkhazian (in Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia), the sparsely recognized de facto independent republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia use Cyrillic-based languages: Both republics use Russian. Additionally, Abkhazia also uses Abkhaz, and South Ossetia uses Ossetian. Azerbaijan's sole official language is Azerbaijani, but the unrecognized de facto independent republic of Nagorno-Karabakh uses Armenian as its sole language. Additionally, Serbia's sole official language is Cyrillic Serbian, but within the country, Latin script for Serbian is also widely used.
↑Difficult to determine, as it is used to write a very large number of languages with varying literacy rates among them.
↑alphabet originally created to this language
↑replaced the runic alphabet
↑replaced the Ogham
↑replaced the Arabic alphabet
↑replaced the Arabic script
↑replaced the Chu Nom
↑Hanja has been banned[citation needed] in North Korea and is increasingly being phased out in South Korea. It is mainly used in official documents, newspapers, books, and signs to identify Chinese roots to Korean words.
↑Based on 46 million speakers of Kannada, Tulu, Konkani, Kodava, Badaga in a state with a 75.6 literacy rate. url=http://updateox.com/india/26-populated-cities-karnataka-population-sex-ratio-literacy
↑Based on 42 million speakers of Burmese in a country (Myanmar) with a 92% literacy rate.
References
↑Halliday, M.A.K., Spoken and written language, Deakin University Press, 1985, p.19
↑"The World's 5 Most Commonly Used Writing Systems | Britannica" (in en). https://www.britannica.com/list/the-worlds-5-most-commonly-used-writing-systems.
↑ 3.03.13.23.33.4Population using script where it is official, according to 100% alphabetization.
↑12
External links
Omniglot: a guide to writing systems
Ancient Scripts: Home:(Site with some introduction to different writing systems and group them into origins/types/families/regions/timeline/A to Z)
Michael Everson's Alphabets of Europe
The World’s Writing Systems, catalogue of 294 writing systems, each with a typographic reference glyph and Unicode status
Deseret Alphabet
ScriptSource – a dynamic, collaborative reference to the writing systems of the world
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