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Phonetic languages, like Spanish and Italian, have consistent relationships between sounds and letters. This makes pronunciation more predictable and easier to learn. Their writing systems usually reflect these sound-letter relationships, making them more straightforward compared to non-phonetic languages like English.
There is no difference: an alphabet is a kind of phonetic writing, in which the signs stand for sounds. Another kind of phonetic writing is called a syllabary. Both are utterly unlike hieroglyphics and ideograms, which may contain phonetic elements. Some alphabetic languages, English and French, for example, may have changed the way words are pronounced while retaining their old spelling, in which case a truly phonetic spelling would differ from the received spelling (see the International Phonetic Alphabet, or IPA). But that does not make the alphabet any less a phonetic writing system.
The three major stages in the development of cuneiform were the pictographic stage (using simple images to represent objects), the transitional stage (combining symbols to represent more complex ideas), and the phonetic stage (assigning symbols to represent syllables or sounds). These stages marked the evolution of cuneiform from a simple pictographic system to a more versatile writing system.
Phonetic languages are different from other languages because they have a direct relationship between the sounds of the language and the way they are written. This means that each sound in the language is represented by a specific symbol or letter. In contrast, other languages may have more complex writing systems that do not always directly correspond to the sounds of the language. This can make phonetic languages easier to learn and pronounce for speakers.
The Phoenicians contributed greatly to written communication by developing the first phonetic alphabet, where each symbol represents a sound. This innovation made writing more accessible and allowed for a more precise and flexible representation of spoken language. The phonetic alphabet served as the foundation for many writing systems that followed.
If you write pictographic, it's more easier to write what you want to say but if you write with the phonetic writing system, it's more easier to understand.
Ancient Egyptian had far more than just two writing systems: Hieratic, Hieroglyphic, Demotic and then Coptic.
It was alphabetic rather than pictographic or syllabic and therefore more accurate and economical.
pictographic
Phonetic languages, like Spanish and Italian, have consistent relationships between sounds and letters. This makes pronunciation more predictable and easier to learn. Their writing systems usually reflect these sound-letter relationships, making them more straightforward compared to non-phonetic languages like English.
yes they even had genesis
There is no difference: an alphabet is a kind of phonetic writing, in which the signs stand for sounds. Another kind of phonetic writing is called a syllabary. Both are utterly unlike hieroglyphics and ideograms, which may contain phonetic elements. Some alphabetic languages, English and French, for example, may have changed the way words are pronounced while retaining their old spelling, in which case a truly phonetic spelling would differ from the received spelling (see the International Phonetic Alphabet, or IPA). But that does not make the alphabet any less a phonetic writing system.
They invented alphabetic writing to replace pictographic and syllabic writings.
No, There is no connection between the writing of Ancient Egypt and the writing of China.However, both systems have a similarity: they are both picture writing (also callled pictographic or logographic writing), where one symbol represents a whole word or idea instead of a sound.
The three major stages in the development of cuneiform were the pictographic stage (using simple images to represent objects), the transitional stage (combining symbols to represent more complex ideas), and the phonetic stage (assigning symbols to represent syllables or sounds). These stages marked the evolution of cuneiform from a simple pictographic system to a more versatile writing system.
The four stages of the development of writing in Sumer are: Pictographic stage – using pictures to represent objects or ideas. Ideographic stage – using symbols to represent concepts or abstract ideas. Phonetic stage – representing sounds or syllables with symbols. Syllabic stage – representing full syllables with symbols.
In Japan, there are 3 writing systems:Hiragana - 46 phonetic symbols plus modifiers to create 71 symbolsKatakana - 46 phonetic symbols plus modifiers to create 71 symbolsKanji - officially 2,136 (but in actuality, there are more than 50,000)