writing system. At the bottom of each cell is the modern letter, with its original
Chinese character form above. stop sign employing the
Latin alphabet and the
Cherokee syllabary in
Tahlequah, Oklahoma Languages that use syllabic writing include
Japanese,
Cherokee,
Vai, the
Yi languages of eastern Asia, the English-based
creole language Ndyuka,
Xiangnan Tuhua, and the ancient language
Mycenaean Greek (
Linear B). The
Cretan Linear A and its derivative
Cypro-Minoan are also believed by some to be syllabic scripts, although as they remain undecoded, this has not been confirmed.
Chinese characters, the
cuneiform script used for
Sumerian,
Akkadian and other languages, and the former
Maya script are largely syllabic in nature, although based on
logograms. They are therefore sometimes referred to as
logosyllabic. The contemporary Japanese language uses two syllabaries together called
kana (in addition to the non-syllabic systems
kanji and
romaji), namely
hiragana and
katakana, which were developed around 800 CE. Because Japanese uses mainly CV (consonant + vowel) syllables, a syllabary is well suited to write the language. As in many syllabaries, vowel sequences and final consonants are written with separate glyphs, so that both
atta and
kaita are written with three kana: あった (
a-t-ta) and かいた (
ka-i-ta). It is therefore more correctly called a
moraic writing system, with syllables consisting of two moras corresponding to two kana symbols. Languages that use syllabaries today tend to have simple
phonotactics, with a predominance of monomoraic (CV) syllables. For example, the modern
Yi script is used to write languages that have no diphthongs or syllable codas; unusually among syllabaries, there is a separate glyph for every consonant-vowel-tone combination (CVT) in the language (apart from one tone which is indicated with a diacritic). Few syllabaries have glyphs for syllables that are not monomoraic, and those that once did have simplified over time to eliminate that complexity. For example, the Vai syllabary originally had separate glyphs for syllables ending in a coda
(doŋ), a long vowel
(soo), or a diphthong
(bai), though not enough glyphs to distinguish all CV combinations (some distinctions were ignored). The modern script has been expanded to cover all moras, but at the same time reduced to exclude all other syllables. Bimoraic syllables are now written with two letters, as in Japanese: diphthongs are written with the help of V or
hV glyphs, and the nasal codas will be written with the glyph for
ŋ, which can form a syllable of its own in Vai. In
Linear B, which was used to transcribe
Mycenaean Greek, a language with complex syllables, complex consonant onsets were either written with two glyphs or simplified to one, while codas were generally ignored, e.g.,
ko-no-so for
Knōsos,
pe-ma for
sperma. The Cherokee syllabary generally uses dummy vowels for coda consonants, but also has a segmental grapheme for /s/, which can be used both as a coda and in an initial /sC/ consonant cluster. == Difference from abugidas ==