Syllabogram

Syllabograms are signs used to write the syllables (or morae) of words. This term is most often used in the context of a writing system otherwise organized on different principles—an alphabet where most symbols represent phonemes, or a logographic script where most symbols represent morphemes—but a system based mostly on syllabograms is a syllabary.

Syllabograms in the Maya script most frequently take the form of V (vowel) or CV (consonant-vowel) syllables of which approximately 83 are known. CVC signs are present as well. Two modern well-known examples of syllabaries consisting mostly of CV syllabograms are the Japanese kana, used to represent the same sounds in different occasions. Syllabograms tend not to be used for languages with more complicated syllables: for example English phonotactics allows syllables as complex as CCCVCCCC (as in /ˈstrɛŋkθs/ strengths), generating many thousands of possible syllables and making the use of syllabograms cumbersome.[1]

Types of writing system that use syllabograms

gollark: Why would you not just use my solution of giant folders of MKV files™?
gollark: Unless it has terrible exotic crypto, it'll be hardware-accelerated, surely.
gollark: Light mode is perfectly valid on laptop-ish devices with non-OLED monitors.
gollark: Why not just an "open search thing" keybind?
gollark: I have a full text searcher but it's really slow.

References

  1. Chris Barker. "How many syllables does English have?". New York University. Archived from the original on 2016-08-22.
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