Script
Script
Module 1
Evolution
History shows that men felt the need to communicate with his fellow beings
through means other than speech.
Man’s necessity to communicate ideas to his fellow beings, who are far enough
not to hear him speak, triggered the need for a writing system. Thus writing
originated with the idea of transferring language and ideas.
Human beings used various forms of picture writings systems for a long time in
different parts of the world to document their lives, before scripts were
formulated.
The Chinese still use a kind of picture writing that is known as ideographic. Over
the time, the need to keep records and to send messages increased, and the
idea of indicating objects by means of pictures was further developed.
At present, most countries and people do not use picture writing except for road
signs and signs in the airports.
Though some cave paintings and rock paintings belonging to the Palaeolithic
Age have been found, scholars believe that the regular system of writing as
commonly understood was introduced not earlier than the 4th millennium B.C.
Though some cave paintings and rock paintings belonging to the Palaeolithic
Age have been found, scholars believe that the regular system of writing as
commonly understood was introduced not earlier than the 4th millennium B.C.
Writing has its origins in the fertile land stretching from the Nile up into the area
often referred to as the Fertile Crescent. The first known writing derives from the
lower reaches of the two greatest rivers in this extended region, the Nile and the
Tigris.
Writing has its origins in the fertile land stretching from the Nile up the area often
referred to as the Fertile Crescent. The first known writing derives from the lower
reaches of the two greatest rivers in this extended region, the Nile and the Tigris.
These fragments have been carbon-dated to between 3300 and 3200 BC.
Meanwhile, the dating of the earliest cuneiform tablets from Sumeria has been
pushed further back, also to around 3200 BC.
The oldest writings in the world are considered to be Sumerian, Egyption, Porto-
Elamite, Porto-Indic, Createn, Hittle and Chinese and their antiquity dates back to
3000 B.C.
The origins of these writings have a common stream and belong to the Proto-
Sumerian Pictographic System. And all these writings have the following five
stages:
Pictorial Writing: Originated in pictures, they are the most rudimentary stage of
writing, and are pictograms. Picture writing can be interpreted orally in any
language without altering the contents of the picture.
Ideographic Writing in which ideas are conveyed through pictures. For example,
an expedition is shown by a number of pictures of men with arms in hand. This
stage is called Semasiography or Forerunners of writing since real writing starts
from this stage of writing.
Word-writing or Logographic writing in which stage writing symbols are used for
words whose meaning doesn’t lend itself by pictures. Numerals are examples of
this stage of writing. Roman number X for ten is an example.
In Syllabic Writing stage, each symbol denotes one syllabic sound and has
phonetic contents. This is found in cuneiform and Egyptian writing.
In the Alphabetic writing stage, each sound has a symbol indicating a vowel
sound. All modern writings are alphabetic.
Most early writing systems begin with small images used as words, literally
depicting the thing in question. But pictograms of this kind are limited. Some
physical objects are too difficult to depict. And many words are concepts rather
than objects.
There are several ways in which early writing evolves beyond the pictorial stage.
One is by combining pictures to suggest a concept. Another is by a form of pun,
in which a pictorial version of one object is modified to suggest another quite
different object which sounds the same when spoken.
The punning kind might put under the same roof a sloping symbol representing
the banks of a river. The combined character, roof and bank, would then stand
for a financial institution - the type of 'house' which is a 'bank'.
Module 2
Importance of Writing
The importance of writing lies in the fact that without writing - without books,
newspapers etc, life would have been different and difficult. The whole system of
civilization would have been a failure without the existence of writing.
If we cannot read about the achievements of the past, if it were not documented
in writing, any kind of writing system, our knowledge system will be paralyzed.
Writing is the most important means of communication; it is the vehicle of
civilization and culture, which is defined as ‘communicable intelligence’.
Like inscriptions, written records can offer information about personages and
events of history. Apart from being vital political documents, writings have great
cultural significance as well. Writings can also give glimpses of the social
conditions of the ages to which they belong.
But in complex societies that use writing, the needs of communication encourage
moves toward a single written norm, codified by governmental, educational, and
literary institutions. The prestige of the written standard is then likely to influence
speech as well.
By contrast, writing permits what is more often called 'literature', i.e. bodies of
text which are much larger and more codified than memory permits. Yet, even in
literate societies, dramatic performance and reading aloud remain important
traditions.
Module 3
According to structural linguistics, the term language should be used for spoken
language or vocal language-communication by means of speech and the term
writing for writing language for communication based on language.
The differences between spoken and written languages are visible in all literary
languages, and writing gets an upper hand in the whole process called
developments of languages. Written language is used to preserve the older
forms of speech and it has an adverse effect on the growth and development of
speech.
Writing always determined and restricted speech. The growth and development
of traditional grammars of languages stipulates this view. If society’s language
system is rooted in a well developed writing system, other than speech, the
language does not undergo many changes.
The languages of the societies that are deprived of writing language system
witness radical changes. Unlike spoken language, writing system helps to
generate a standard and unity in the language system of society whereas spoken
language exhibits a large number of dialectic varieties.
Most literate people can convey the same messages in either speech or writing,
but speech typically conveys more explicit information than writing. Hebrew and
Arabic scripts indicate consonants but often omit symbols for vowels.
In Chinese, the symbols that correspond to words may give no indication of
pronunciation, or only partial cues. The spoken and written forms of a given
language tend to correspond to one or more levels and may influence each
other—as when 'through' is spelled 'thru'.
Even today, there are many world languages that can be spoken but have no
standard written form. Such languages can be expressed in writing using the
International Phonetic Alphabet.
Even from the point of view of syntax, spoken language usually has its own set of
grammatical patterns which sometimes may be quite different from that in written
language. In many languages, the written form is considered a different
language, a situation called diglossia.
Most contemporary linguists work under the assumption that spoken (or signed)
language is more fundamental than written language. This is because
• There have been many cultures and speech communities that lack written
communication
• Speech evolved before human beings invented writing;
• People learn to speak and to process spoken languages more easily and
much earlier than writing
Module 4
At present, most people or groups do not use picture writing. The order of the
present writing system is alphabetic.
The invention of printing press has stabilised the alphabetic writing systems
making reading and writing more common. It is hard to imagine a world devoid
of alphabets and writing.
The history of the alphabet started in ancient Egypt. By 2700 BCE, Egyptian
writing had a set of some 24 hieroglyphs which are called uniliterals. However,
although seemingly alphabetic in nature, the original Egyptian uniliterals were not
a system.
European Alphabets
One of these became the Latin alphabet, which spread across Europe as the
Romans expanded their empire.
Asian alphabets
The Arabic alphabet, Hebrew alphabet, Syriac alphabet, and other abjads of the
Middle East are developments of the Aramaic alphabet, but because these
writing systems are largely consonant-based, they are often not considered true
alphabets.
Most alphabetic scripts of India and Eastern Asia are descended from the Brahmi
script, which is often believed to be a descendent of Aramaic.
The term "alphabet" is used by linguists and paleographers in both a wide and a
narrow sense. In the wider sense, an alphabet is a script that is segmental at the
phoneme level; it has separate glyphs for individual sounds, and not for larger
units such as syllables or words.
The unit tries to discuss the relation between speech and writing and how writing
standardised language practices. The evolution of alphabets, its different
components and the role it plays in formulating a writing system also have been
covered in this Unit. The various stages in the development of ancient writing
system are also being discussed in the Unit.
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OBJECTIVES
SUMMARY
This unit deals with the evolution of writing system. How and why the writing
system came into existence? It unravels the importance of writing system in a
culture and how writing system helps us to record the cultural, socio-economic
and political activities of a past or existing culture. The unit tries to discuss the
relation between speech and writing and how writing standardised language
practices. The evolution of alphabets, its different components and the role it
plays in formulating a writing system also have been covered in this Unit. The
various stages in the development of ancient writing system are also being
discussed in the Unit.
Q) What is an alphabet?
A) The importance of writing lies in the fact that without writing - without
books, newspapers etc, life would have been different and difficult. The whole
system of civilization would have been a failure without the existence of writing. If
we cannot read about the achievements of the past, if it were not documented in
writing, any kind of writing system, our knowledge system will be paralysed.
Since culture is defined as ‘communicable intelligence’, since writing is the most
important means of communication, it is the vehicle of civilisation and culture.
ASSIGNMENTS
QUIZ
A-Why writing was invented
a) To create literature
b) To communicated ideas
c) To make administrative records
d) To write
a) A script
b) An alphabet
c) A vowel
d) A consonant
a) Greece
b) India
c) Egypt
d) Italy
GLOSSARY
Writing
Letters or symbols written on a surface to represent the sounds or words of a
language.
Speech
The exchange of spoken words or communication by word of mouth.
Alphabet
A character set that includes letters and is used to write a language.
Language
A systematic means of communicating by the use of sounds or conventional
symbols.
Structural linguistics
Structural linguistics is an approach to linguistics originating from the work of the
Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure. It first appeared in the mid-twentieth
century during the study of Indo-European Languages. It analyses how words
form and how those words are used together to form larger structures.
Pictograms
A symbol which is a picture that represents an object or concept, e.g. a picture of
an envelope used to represent an e-mail message. Pictograms are common in
everyday life, e.g. signs in public places or roads, whereas the term "icon" is
specific to interfaces on computers or other electronic devices.
Reference
1) Singh Upinder, A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the
Stone Age to the 12th Century,Pearson Education India, 2008