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Arebica or arabica was a variant of the Perso-Arabic script used by Bosniaks to write the Bosnian language. It was used mainly between the 15th and 19th centuries. In the 20th century there were some efforts made to accept Arebica as the third alphabet for writing (alongside Latin and Cyrillic script), but they were unsuccessful and Arebica was officially forbidden. The last book printed in this alphabet was in 1941.
One of the oldest texts written in Arabica is a love song called Chirvat-türkisi ('Croatian song') from 1588, written by a certain Mehmed in Bosnia. This manuscript is held in the National Library in Vienna. Except for literature Arabica was also used in religious schools and administration. Of course, it was in much lesser use than other scripts.
Arebica was made of original perso-Arabic letters with some special characters added for the [ts],[lj] and [nj] phonemes (which are not found in Arabic, Persian or Ottoman Turkish). Symbols are also included for all vowels, making Arebica a true alphabet (unlike both the original Arabic script and the Persian script).
The final version of Arebica was made by Mehmed Džemaludin Čaušević at the end of the 19th century. His version of alphabet was called also Matufovica, Matufovača or Mektebica.
| arebica | latinica | arebica | latinica | arebica | latinica |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| آ | a | غ | g | ۉ | o |
| ب | b | ح | h | پ | p |
| ڄ | c | اى | i | ر | r |
| چ | č | ي | j | س | s |
| ć | ق | k | ش | š | |
| د | d | ل | l | ت | t |
| ج | dž | ڵ | lj | ۆ | u |
| đ | م | m | و | v | |
| ه | e | ن | n | ز | z |
| ف | f | nj | ژ | ž |
Text example:
- مۉليمۉ سه تهبي بۉژه = Molimo se tebi, Bože (We pray to you, o God)
See also
- Gaj's Latin alphabet
- Serbian Cyrillic alphabet
- Belarusian Arabic alphabet, another script used by Slavic-speaking Muslims
- Category:Arabic-derived alphabets
External links
- Hevaji Text examples: Hevaji, Kaimija, etc.
- Još malo o arebici (More on arebica)
References
- Enciklopedija leksikografskog zavoda, entry: Arabica. Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod, Zagreb, 1966
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




