A modern example of boustrophedonics is the numbering scheme of sections within
survey townships in the
United States and
Canada. In both countries, survey townships are divided into a 6-by-6 grid of 36 sections. In the U.S.
Public Land Survey System, Section 1 of a township is in the northeast corner, and the numbering proceeds boustrophedonically until Section 36 is reached in the southeast corner. Canada's
Dominion Land Survey also uses boustrophedonic numbering, but starts at the southeast corner. Following a similar scheme, street numbering in the
United Kingdom sometimes proceeds serially in one direction then turns back in the other (the same numbering method is used in some mainland European cities). This is in contrast to the more common method of odd and even numbers on opposite sides of the street both increasing in the same direction. script written using boustrophedon The
Avoiuli script used on
Pentecost Island in
Vanuatu is written boustrophedonically by design. The
Indus script, though still undeciphered, can be written boustrophedonically. Another example is the
boustrophedon transform, known in
mathematics. Sources also indicate that
Linear A may have been written left-to-right, right-to-left, and in boustrophedon fashion.
Permanent human teeth are numbered in a boustrophedonic sequence in the American
Universal Numbering System. Marilyn Aronberg Lavin adopted the term to describe a type of
narrative direction a
mural painting cycle may take:“The boustrophedon is found on the surface of single walls [
linear] as well on one or more opposing walls [
aerial] of a given sanctuary. The narrative reads on several tiers, first from left to right, then reversing from right to left, or vice versa.” In digital file compression for spatial data, the GRIB2 compression algorithm packs values “boustrophedonically to make ‘consecutive’ values more redundant.”
Moon type, an early form of notation for the visually impaired, was sometimes written in boustrophedon so that the reader would not need to lift their finger from the reading surface after reaching the end of a line. While the reading direction changed, the orientation of the glyphs remained constant in relation to the page. In 1884 the British printer and publisher
Andrew White Tuer published
Are We to Read Backwards?, written by James Millington, for the
Leadenhall Press, in which the principle was tested on one page of English text. In 2025 the graphic and type designer Carl J. Kurtz expanded on the thoughts in
Are We to Read Backwards?, developing a Latin typeface to accommodate boustrophedon and setting a book, written in English, in boustrophedon to test its feasibility for modern texts.
In constructed languages The constructed language
Ithkuil uses a boustrophedon script. The
Atlantean language created by
Marc Okrand for Disney's 2001 film
Atlantis: The Lost Empire is written in boustrophedon to recreate the feeling of flowing water. The code language used in
The Montmaray Journals, Kernetin, is written boustrophedonically. It is a combination of
Cornish and Latin and is used for secret communication.
J. R. R. Tolkien wrote that many elves were ambidextrous and would write left-to-right or right-to-left as needed. In the
Green Star novels by
Lin Carter, the script of the Laonese people is written in boustrophedon style. == Rousseau ==