She corys screeuee eh abugida. Ta ny cowraghyn ("lettyryn") echey cowraghey corockle as breeockle undinagh echey; t'ad caghlaa y breeockle t'ayn liorish caghlaa cummey y lettyr ny cur stiagh scarreydee.[1][2] Hug roish Peter T. Daniels yn ennym abjad, ayns ynnyd jeh'n çhenn ennym corys screeuee corocklagh ny sheelaght, as eshyn jannoo ymmyd elley jeh sheelaght.[3]

Ta'n lettyr cowraghey corockle ennagh, as t'ad goll er screeu ayns straih. Ta breeocklyn croghey er ny corocklyn: ta corockle undinagh ec y chorockle, agh foddee oo eh y chaghlaa y breeockle liorish scarreydagh, ny liorish caghlaa cummey y lettyr. Ta ynnydyn ny scarreydee croghey er y vreeockle t'ayn; cha nel ad goll er screeu ayns y straih cheddin as ny corocklyn.

Mannagh vel corockle ec breeockle ennagh, foddee oo screeu shen liorish:

Mannagh vel breeockle ec corockle ennagh, foddee oos screeu shen liorish:

Haink yn ennym abugida jeh obbyr Peter T. Daniels. She ennym yn screeu Ge‘ez t'ayn, rere y chied chiare lettyryn echey: aləf, bet, gäməl, dənt. T

Ta Daniels rheynn abugidaghyn jeh abbyrlhittyn er y fa nagh vel breeocklyn mastey cowraghyn bunneydagh y chorys screeuee. T'eh rheynn ad jeh abjadyn (possan noa elley jeant echey) er y fa dy vel ny scarreydee ec abjadyn reihyssagh, as cha nel ad ry-akin ayns screeu focklymagh, ny ayns screeu cadjin noadyr, son y chooid smoo. Ayns abugida, shegin dhyt breeocklyn y chowraghey dagh keayrt. Ta Daniels eddyrscarrey abugidaghyn as sheelaghtyn er y fa dy vel cummaghyn lettyryn abugida croghey er ny breeocklyn as corocklyn t'ayn, agh ayns sheelaght, foddee cummey erbee ve oc.

Ta'n screeudeyr shennaghys screeuee Barry Powell goaill noi abugida, chammah's abjad, er coontey sheiltynys as shennaghys. [4]

Imraaghyn

  1. Omniglot. Syllabic alphabets. Feddynit er 2009-07-07. "Syllabic alphabets, alphasyllabaries or abugidas consist of symbols for consonants and vowels. The consonants each have an inherent vowel which can be changed to another vowel or muted by means of diacritics. Vowels can also be written with separate letters when they occur at the beginning of a word or on their own."
  2. Encyclopædia Britannica Online (Baarle). writing (2009). Feddynit er 2009-05-13.
  3. Daniels, Peter T.; et al. (1996). The World's Writing Systems, 4.
  4. Barry Powell (2009). Writing: Theory and History of the Technology of Civilization. Wiley-Blackwell, 172-174. ISBN 978-1-4051-6256-2.