I don't know look it up in a book we can give you the wrong answers y'all some lazy people
The Shang writing system is logographic, where each character represents a word or concept, while the modern alphabet is phonetic, with symbols representing individual sounds. Shang writing used a combination of pictograms and logograms, while the modern alphabet is based on letters that represent sounds in a linear sequence. Additionally, the Shang writing system was primarily used on oracle bones for divination, while our modern alphabet is used for a wide range of languages and purposes.
The Phoenicians are credited with developing a writing system made up of 22 characters known as the Phoenician alphabet. This alphabet served as the basis for many modern writing systems, including Greek and Latin.
By this time it consisted of about 700 symbol's that stood for words or syllable's about 1400b.c.,the Phoenicians had developed 22 simple characters for the entire writing system. Each character stood for a consonant.* Later,the Greeks added vowels to the Phoenician alphabet.
While many Chinese people are learning the Western alphabet (usually as part of learning English), there is no widespread conversion from the Chinese writing system to the Western alphabet. The Chinese writing system, which uses characters, is still the predominant form of writing in China.
English 1500 years ago was known as Old English, which was heavily influenced by Germanic languages. It had a different vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation compared to Modern English. The writing system was also different, using runes instead of the Latin alphabet.
The Chinese writing system does not have an alphabet like the English language. Instead, Chinese characters represent words or morphemes. Modern Chinese dictionaries list around 8,000 characters, with basic literacy requiring knowledge of about 2,000 commonly used characters.
It was the first system of characters for phoenetic writing, on which Greek, Latin and modern European writing developed.
Egyptian hieroglyphs are pictographs that correspond the sound of the first syllable of the thing being depicted. Phoenician cuneiform writing uses abstract symbols to correspond with spoken sounds. The latter evolved into the Greek alphabet, then the Roman alphabet, and then into the modern Western alphabet.
Not really, no. The First modern, fully alphabetic writing system (including vowels) was the Greek alphabet, which was inspired by the Phoenician alphabet, which only had consonants.
An alphabet.
The Phoenicians are credited with developing a writing system made up of 22 characters known as the Phoenician alphabet. This alphabet served as the basis for many modern writing systems, including Greek and Latin.
There have been five different writing systems in Egypt at different periods since earliest times:HieroglyphsHieratic scriptDemotic scriptCoptic scriptArabic
The Egyptians did not have an alphabet - their writing system was much more complex than that. The first alphabet was developed in the Sinai region around 1500 BC, using signs resembling some Egyptian hieroglyphs, but with different sound values. Proto-Canaanite script followed, then Ugaritic, Phoenician, many different Greek scripts, Ancient Hebrew, Aramaic, Nabatean, Punic and many other alphabets. The final stages were modern European (Roman), Modern Arabic, Modern Hebrew and Modern Amharic.
Egyptian hieroglyphs are pictographs that correspond the sound of the first syllable of the thing being depicted. Phoenician cuneiform writing uses abstract symbols to correspond with spoken sounds. The latter evolved into the Greek alphabet, then the Roman alphabet, and then into the modern Western alphabet.
The Phoenician Alphabet was a phonetic system with 22 letters that represent consonants. The Cuneiform system used pictographs to represent entire words and concepts, and had many thousands of characters.
By this time it consisted of about 700 symbol's that stood for words or syllable's about 1400b.c.,the Phoenicians had developed 22 simple characters for the entire writing system. Each character stood for a consonant.* Later,the Greeks added vowels to the Phoenician alphabet.
Not only did all of the Romance languages evolve from Latin, but in the 19th century, some English grammarians decided that Latin was the perfect language and decided to rewrite the rules of English to make it more like Latin. So, such rules as not putting prepositions at the ends of sentences and not splitting infinitives (though that one does get disregarded in more poetic English. Star Trek wouldn't be the same without it) come straight out of Latin. Generally, with Romance languages and English, that which is considered to be better grammar is more closely related to Latin.
Yes and a no because they sometimes used symbols and one grope made a different writing system similar to the American Alphabet.