Apsinthian Alphabet

Revision as of 20:55, 28 October 2022 by Thrace (talk | contribs) (Undo revision 568922 by Thrace (talk))
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Apsinthian
Glagolitsa in Zagreb cathedral.jpg
Apsinthian script in the Great Arciluco Cathedral
Type
LanguagesAmathian
CreatorSaint Apsinthius
Time period
862/863 to the Middle Ages
DirectionTemplate:ISO 15924 direction
ISO 15924Glag, Template:ISO 15924 numberCategory:Scripts with ISO 15924 four-letter codes
Unicode alias
Template:ISO 15924 alias

Alphabet

Amathian spelling is mostly phonemic without silent letters (but see i). The table below gives the correspondence between letters and sounds, while also indicating the closest Solarian equivalents of the Apsinthian letters. Some of the letters have several possible readings, even if allophones are not taken into account. When vowels /i/, /u/, /e/, and /o/ are changed into their corresponding semivowels, this is not marked in writing. Letters K, Q, W, and Y generally appear only in foreign borrowings; the pronunciation of W and Y depends on the origin of the word they appear in.


Unicode Round Angular Solarian Sound Name Origin
Azu Azu А /ɑ/ A Phoenician alphabet aleph 𐤀‎ or the sign of the cross
Bouky Bouky B /b/ B Unknown, possibly Atudite bet בּ
C /k/, /tʃ/ Ce, Cî Atudite qoph ק
Dobro Dobro D /d/ De, dî Piraean delta Δ
Jestu Jestu E /e/, /e̯/, /je/ E Possibly Samaritan īy ‎ or Piraean sampi ϡ
Fritu Fritu F /f/ Ef, Fe, Fî Variant of Piraean phi φ
Glagolu Glagolu G /ɡ/, /dʒ/ Ge, Ghe, Gî Possibly cursive Piraean gamma
Heru Heru H /h/, /x/, /ç/ Haș, Ha, Hî [unknown] (similar to and Solarian h)
Ⰹ, Ⰺ I, Izhe Izhe I /i/,/j/,/ʲ/ I Possibly Piraean upsilon Y or Piraean iota with dieresis ϊ
Zhivete Zhivete J /ʒ/ Je, Jî Unknown, possibly Coptic janja ϫ or astrological symbol for Pisces Template:Emoji presentation
Ljudie , Ljudie Ljudie L /l/, /ʎ/ El, Le, Lî Possibly Piraean lambda λ
Myslite Myslite М /m/ Em, Me, Mî Greek mu μ
Našь, Nashi Nashi N /n/, /ɲ/ En, Ne, Nî [unknown]
Onu Onu О /o/, /o̯/ O [unknown]
Pokoi Pokoi P /p/ Pe, Pî Possibly a variant of early Greek pi