Trace the development of the
writing system. How did the English alphabet develop?
The earliest known forms of writing
represented words with pictures. Cuneiform started by the Sumerians and
hieroglyphics used by the Egyptians were two of the original ways of
communicating in written form. Egyptian pictographs had a cursive form called
hieratic which was faster to write, was a freer, looser interpretation of the
pictographs and featured ligatures (strokes connecting individual letters). The
challenge of pictographic communication is the large number of symbols which
must be memorized. Alphabets, on the other hand, represent the sounds of
speech; so far fewer symbols need to be learned.
In 1999, a discovery of graffiti inscribed on
a rock at Wadi el-Hol, Egypt, pushed back the origins of the development of an
alphabet to between 1900 and 1800 BC. This early Semitic scrawl points to ties
between Egyptian hieratic script and the earliest known alphabet. The first
widely known alphabet was developed by the Phoenicians (from the
Greek-coined phoiniki meaning "purple people" for the dye they sold
around the Mediterranean) in about 1200BC. The alphabet represented consonants
and was primarily used by merchants to record commercial transactions.
The accompanying chart shows the Phoenician
alphabet around 1400 BC. The Phoenician alphabet is acrophonicmeaning
each letter represents the initial sound of the name of the letter. For
example, the last letter in the Phoenician is called taw or tah (meaning
mark) and led to our current letter T with the same sound...............................................................................................................................
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