It provided a simple means of writing and record-keeping then the pictograms and syllabic writing, and forms the basis of today's alphabets.
The History of the Greek alphabet began with the adoption of Phoenician letter forms.
The alphabet we use today is primarily derived from the Phoenician alphabet, which was developed by the Phoenician civilization around 1200 BCE. This writing system laid the foundation for several other alphabets, including Greek and Latin, through adaptations and modifications. The Phoenician alphabet was significant for its simplicity and efficiency, influencing many cultures and languages throughout history.
The Greeks expanded their alphabet by adapting the Phoenician script, which was primarily consonantal, into a writing system that included vowels. This innovation allowed for greater phonetic representation of the Greek language, making it more versatile and accessible for recording spoken language. The addition of vowels not only facilitated literacy but also influenced the development of subsequent alphabets, including the Latin alphabet. This adaptation marked a significant milestone in the history of writing and communication in the Western world.
The first entirely phonetic writing system was created (or at least promoted) by the Phoenicians. It was a 22 consonant alphabet, also called an "abjad" because it had no vowels. It is unknown when it began, but the Phoenician alphabet was well established by 1050 BCE. It was the basis of the Hebrew alphabet, and later the Greek alphabet. It spread through trade, and was popular because it didn't require memorization of hundreds or thousands of pictures, as other systems required.
It was the first purely phonetic writing system in the history of humanity (as far as we know). It was an alphabet of only 22 letters, compared to the thousands of symbols required to read Egyptian or Sumerian.
the phoenician contributed to our history by coming up with the alphebet
History says that the immediate ancestor of the Roman alphabet is the elementary commercial marking system of Phoenician traders, adopted and modified by the Greeks, further modified by the Etruscans, the Romans and later peoples all over the world. The ultimate ancestor is the hieratic writing of Egypt, from which some of the Phoenician symbols derive. Greek Myth says that Hermes designed the letters based on the flight of cranes in Egypt, and Cadmus brought them to Greece.
No. The history of the phonetic alphabet started in ancient Egypt. By 2700 BCE Egyptian writing had a set of some 24 hieroglyphs which are called uniliterals, to represent syllables that begin with a single consonant of their language, plus a vowel (or no vowel) to be supplied by the native speaker.
The letters K, L, M, and N are part of the Latin alphabet and were not "discovered" in the traditional sense. They have evolved over centuries from ancient scripts such as the Phoenician alphabet. Each letter has a history tied to various cultures and languages, but they are not attributed to a specific individual or discovery.
The letter "V" has its origins in the Phoenician alphabet, where it represented the sound /w/ and was symbolized by a character resembling a modern "Y." The Greeks adapted the Phoenician character into their alphabet, using it for the vowel sound /u/ and later for /v/, which evolved in Latin to signify the consonantal sound /v/. Over time, the letter "V" came to represent both the vowel and consonant sounds in various languages, solidifying its place in the modern English alphabet. Its distinct shape developed from the Latin "V," which was used interchangeably with "U" until the Renaissance period, when they were formally differentiated.
The Carthaginians were of Phoenician origin. The Latins called Phoenician the equivalent of Punic, and they wrote the history.
in their history