| 
  • If you are citizen of an European Union member nation, you may not use this service unless you are at least 16 years old.

  • You already know Dokkio is an AI-powered assistant to organize & manage your digital files & messages. Very soon, Dokkio will support Outlook as well as One Drive. Check it out today!

View
 

The Alphabet

This version was saved 15 years, 3 months ago View current version     Page history
Saved by megan.couch
on December 8, 2008 at 11:39:20 pm
 

Overview of Alphabet:

The Alphabet is a system of written and printed langUage in which each symbol generally represents one sound. [2]  The English alphabet is nowhere near the the ideal phonographic significance. 

 

 

 

 

The alphabet and the history of it comes from ancient Egypt.  Around 2000 BC is when the first pure alphabets came about in anciet Egypt.   It appeared as a, "representation of language developed by Semitic workers in Egypt." [1]  There are numerous different alphabets that exist in the world.  They either descended from a discovery of some kind, or some how came about from the design.  The designs where either the Phoenician alphabet or the Greek alphabet. 

 

The Phaistos Disk:

This disk was found by an archeologist.  People were (just like today) curious out there.  So as they were being curious they came across this disk.  "Its purpose, meaning, and geographical place of manufacture, reamin disputed, making it one of the most famour mysteries of archaeology."[1]  There has yet, to this day, been something even comparable to the Phaistos Disk.  It is significant.  The Phaistos disk has a small number of comparable symbols, which are known from Cretan inscriptions.  Cretan inscriptions are also known as Cretan hieroglyphs.  The Phaistos Disk can be found in the archaeological museum of herakleion in Crete, Greece on display.  [1]

This picture of the phaistos disk is to give an example of what they looked like and see the creation they have made in the past.

The Phaistos Disk

 

"As you can see in the image above there are numerous things on these disks.  There are a total of 241 tokes on the disc, comprising 45 unigue signs." (The Alphabet).  Around 45 of these signs represent things of the everyday life.  "There is a small diagonal line that occurs underneath the final sign in a group a total of 18 times.  The disc shows traces of corrections made by the scribe in several places." [1]  This disk caught numerous people's eye.  The imagination of the archeologists was captured by this disk also.  

 

The Phoenician:

This alphabet continued intothe Proto-Canaanite alphabet.  "The Phoenicians are the descendants of the Broze Age Canaanites who, protected by tthe Lebanon mmountains and the sea, did not succumb to the Israelites or the 'Sea Peoples'." [1]  When they first appeared in the western historiography, The Phoenicians possed scores throughout the colonies.  "The Phoenciana alphabet was based on the prinicple that one sign represents one spoken word." [1]  The Phoenician alphabet helped awaken the Greek alphabet.  "All of the names of the letter of the phoenician alphabet started with consonants, and these consonants were twhat the letters represented." [1]  These consonants were very hard to pronounce.  Basically almost impossible so the Greeks started to pronounce things with initial vowels.  After that...the letters now stood for the vowels.  "This fortunate development only provided for six of the twelve Greek vowels, the Greeks eventually created digraphs and other modifications, such as ei, ou, and o, or in some cases simply ignored the deficiency as in long a,i, u." [1]

This is an example of the writing the took place.

 

The Greeks:

This is how the Greeks displayed their ways of writing.

 

The Greek provided the alphabet as its scripts to Europe.  "The History of the Greek alphabet starts with the adoption of Phoenician letterforms and contrinues to the present day. "[1]  Therefore, The Greek alphabet is considered the "true alphabet."  Romans used the Greek alphabet in the form of our upper case letters.  Romans made their own art of writing.  They made numerous different styles and different forms of letters.  "Serif's originated withthe carving of words into stone in ancient italy.  Roman stonemasons started addding little hooks to the tips of letters to prevent the chisel from slipping, which turned out to be the very aesthetic as well as legibility increasing addition to type that we use to this day." [1] The Romans also invented soething called the baseline.  "In typography and penmanship, the baseline is the line upon which most letters "sit" and under which desceneders extend.  By these additions Romans ensured that tupe, in opposition to the higgeldy piggedly writing of the Greeks, was perfectly aligned in rows." [1]

 

As the Romans continued to write, they distinguished lower case letters.  They eventually added some types of punctuations.  The next Roman discovery/invention was the Codex.  "A codex is a handwritten book, in general, one prodcued from late Antiquity through the Middle Ages." The codex eventually was thw written medium.  The codex was known as a major improvement when compared to the scroll.  The codex could be opened as a flat page.  Therefore, that made it easier for people to read.  It was very easy to carry around and could be written on.  "The alphabet used by the Romans cosnisted only of capital letters . The lower case lettters developed in the Middle Ages from cursive writing, first as the uncial script, and later as minuscule script.  The old Roman letters were retained for formal inscriptions and for emphasis in writtin documents.  The languages that use the latin alphabet generally use capital letter sto beging paragraphs and sentences and for proper nouns."[1]

 

The Greek alphabet came about in the 9th century BC.  The Greek alphabet is considered the oldest of all writing systems.  Greek has history of using two different scripts:  The Eastern and Western Greek.  They were different because they wrote different symbols.  The alphabet that came from Greece appeared to have 27 different letters.  These letters were written from left to right...as we read them today.   

 

References: 

[1] No Author.  "The History of Visual Communication- The Alphabet."  Retrieved November 24, 2008,

          from http:www.citrinitas.com/history_of_viscom/alphabet.html

 

[2]  McArthur, Tom.  (1998).  Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. 

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.