Archaeologists have determined that the first workable alphabet was Phoenician in origin, and written as a crude script. However, each letter stood for a sound, and had a symbol of its own. This alphabet, dating from 1600 BC, is the ancestor of all modern Western alphabets. Once introduced, it spread rapidly through the Middle East and finally, people of the time were able to write out complete words. Ideas could be expressed much more easily than before, and narrative stories and poetry began to appear. The first Greek alphabet was developed from the Phoenician one during the fifth century BC. It was changed, improved, and extended until it had great flexibility. It became known as the Ionic alphabet and had 24 characters. When the Romans smashed the Greek Empire, they adopted this alphabet and adapted it to their own needs
Greeks today dropped: digamma, stigma, heta, yot, san, koppa, sampi, sho: q, called koppa, is originally part of the greek alphabet, though it was not used by the attic dialect which became the standard; likewise f, the digamma, was extinct in attic writing, although it continued to affect the pronunciation of many words; y was and is still in the greek alphabet; as for c - that was the latin form of the greek k; j is a mediaeval european adaptation of latin i; the v-sound did not occur in greek until late, and the letter b is used for it; and w is a very late, northern adaptation of consonantal u.
became is not a noun? it is a verb.
I have lost my necklace.He bought her a diamond necklace for her birthday.
(Became is the past tense of "become" a linking verb based on "to be." It cannot be used directly in a question as are the versions "did become" or "have become." There is one rarely used form.)"What became of the villagers after the fire?""If he became violent, what would they do with him?""Did the doctor say why it became necessary to change medications?"
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The Phoenician society, located in the eastern Mediterranean coastal region of the Fertile Crescent, developed an alphabet that served as the basis for the Greek alphabet. The Phoenician alphabet consisted of 22 consonant symbols, which were adopted and modified by the Greeks to incorporate vowel sounds as well. This Greek alphabet, in turn, became the foundation for the Latin alphabet used in many Western languages today.
They invented an alphabet and it was later adapted by the Greeks and Romans and it so became the basis of the alphabets we use today.
Their alphabet became the basis of modern writing.
An alphabet which became the basis for later alphabets.
The Sumerians (4000-2500) BC created Cuneiform. They used a stylus to write on soft clay. [The Phoenicians created 22 symbols of the alphabet- which was later adopted by the Greeks who added vowels (it became the alphabet we use today) ]
Their alphabet became the basis of Greek, Roman and hence today's alphabets.
The Phoenicians were a Semitic people who settled in the Levant (eastern Mediterranean coast). They became great traders, and as their civilisation developed, invented the alphabet which formed the basis of Greek, Roman and today's alphabetical writings.
An alphabet which became the basis of Greek and Roman alphabets, and so today's alphabets.
Developing an alphabet which became the basis of the Greek and Roman ones, and hence of today's alphabets.
As merchants, the Phoenicians needed a simple to ease the burden of keeping records. They therefore replaced the cumbersome cuneiform alphabet of 550 characters with a phonetic alphabet, based on distinct sounds, consisting of 22 characters. After further alterations by the Greeks and Romans, this alphabet became this one we use today!
Phoenicians