Devanagari's descendants in North and South India, Indonesia and the Philippines

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Christopher R. Miller
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

Several scripts in northern and southern India, Indonesia and the Philippines developed from informal varieties of Devanagari restricted to intimate, shorthand-like uses by members of mercantile occupations. The mercantile varieties took a characteristic quasi-abjad form with postconsonantal vowels unspelt. This paper follows the development of these scripts, demonstrating how they gave rise to the new scripts in South India, Indonesia and the Philippines. The basic relationships between these scripts are demonstrated with cursory descriptions of their structural correspondences, followed by a discussion for each of the ways the orthographic system changed back to a more classic abugida as a result of borrowing from prestige contact scripts or innovations in the use of existing resources. In addition to these more typical phenomena, we describe some quirky spelling conventions in Sumatran, Sulawesi and Philippine scripts, tracing them to practices used to teach combinations of vowel and coda signs on consonant letters.
Devanagari的后裔分布在印度北部和南部,印度尼西亚和菲律宾
印度北部和南部、印度尼西亚和菲律宾的一些文字是从梵语的非正式变体发展而来的,这些梵语仅限于商业职业成员亲密的、类似速记的使用。商业变体采用一种典型的准辅音形式,后辅音元音未拼写。本文跟踪这些文字的发展,展示了它们是如何在南印度、印度尼西亚和菲律宾产生新的文字的。这些文字之间的基本关系通过对其结构对应的粗略描述来证明,随后讨论了正字法系统由于借用威望接触文字或利用现有资源的创新而变回更经典的abugida的每种方式。除了这些更典型的现象,我们还描述了苏门答腊、苏拉威西和菲律宾文字中一些奇怪的拼写习惯,将它们追溯到教授辅音字母上元音和尾号组合的做法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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Writing Systems Research
Writing Systems Research Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
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