Sequoia
Sequoyah, also known as George Guess or Gist, is the man who invented the Cherokee syllabary. He was born sometime in 1770 and died in August of 1843. He worked as a Cherokee silversmith.
He invented the Cherokee syllabary, a writing system still used today. Now all Apple computers come with Cherokee installed and there's a Cherokee-language Google that uses Sequoyah's syllabary.
sacagawea i dont know how to spell it
Syllabary is what the Cherokee call their alphabet.
86
The Cherokee alphabet was syllabary. Given to the Cherokee by Seqouah a great Cherokee Indian
Sequoyah is credited with creating the syllabary for the Cherokee people. The syllabary consisted of 85 (some say 86) symbols representing unique sound combinations in the Cherokee language.
Syllabary is what the Cherokee call their alphabet.
Sequoyah wrote the Cherokee syllabary - alphabet. (please note however he was not a "Chief")
Cherokee is a syllabary. This means that each letter represents the sound of a syllable rather than the sound of the letter. When transliterated from the Cherokee syllabary, the spelling for Diane would be something like Deene (de-e-ne).
The Cherokee syllabary was created by Sequoyah.