Appendix:Nulisü orthography: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{LangBar|Nulisü}} {{stub}} The Nulisü language from David J. Peterson and Jessie Peterson's {{wl|YouTube}} series ''LangTime Studio'' is written using a {{w|syllabary}}. ==Orthography== The script used to write Nulisü is a syllabary, meaning that it has glyphs representing consonant-vowel syllables. However, it represents the sounds as they were at an earlier point in the language's history, and due to sound changes, there is no longer a one-to-one...")
 
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==Orthography==
==Orthography==
The script used to write Nulisü is a syllabary, meaning that it has glyphs representing consonant-vowel syllables. However, it represents the sounds as they were at an earlier point in the language's history, and due to sound changes, there is no longer a one-to-one correspondence between glyphs and phonemes. In other words, the script displays a certain degree of {{w|orthographic depth}}.
The script used to write Nulisü is a syllabary, meaning that it has glyphs representing syllables, specifically ones consisting of consonant-vowel sequences, which are for the most part different in form. However, it represents the sounds as they were at an earlier point in the language's history, and due to sound changes, there is no longer a one-to-one correspondence between glyphs and phonemes. In other words, the script displays a certain degree of {{w|orthographic depth}}.


[[Category:Nulisü language|Orthography]]
[[Category:Nulisü language|Orthography]]

Latest revision as of 00:53, 5 October 2024

Nulisü Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary, Orthography

The Nulisü language from David J. Peterson and Jessie Peterson's YouTube series LangTime Studio is written using a syllabary.

Orthography

The script used to write Nulisü is a syllabary, meaning that it has glyphs representing syllables, specifically ones consisting of consonant-vowel sequences, which are for the most part different in form. However, it represents the sounds as they were at an earlier point in the language's history, and due to sound changes, there is no longer a one-to-one correspondence between glyphs and phonemes. In other words, the script displays a certain degree of orthographic depth.