Writing systems are most often classified according to what units of language a system's graphemes correspond to. At the most basic level, writing systems can be either phonographic () when graphemes represent units of sound in a language, or morphographic ('form writing') when graphemes represent units of meaning (such as
words or
morphemes). Depending on the author, the older term
logographic ('word writing') is often used, either with the same meaning as
morphographic, or specifically in reference to systems where the basic unit being written is the word. Recent scholarship generally prefers
morphographic over
logographic, with the latter seen as potentially vague or misleadingin part because systems usually operate on the level of morphemes, not words. Some authors make a distinct primary divisionbetween
pleremic (from Greek 'full') systems with graphemes that have semantic value in isolation (like logographs), and
cenemic (from Greek 'empty') systems with graphemes that lack any such separable meaning (like letters). Many classifications define three primary categories, where phonographic systems are subdivided into syllabic and alphabetic (or
segmental) systems. Syllabaries use symbols called syllabograms to represent
syllables or
moras. Alphabets use symbols called letters that correspond to spoken phonemes (or more technically, to
diaphonemes). Alphabets are generally classified into three subtypes, with
abjads having letters for
consonants, pure alphabets having letters for both consonants and
vowels, and
abugidas having characters that correspond to consonant–vowel pairs.
David Diringer proposed a five-fold classification of writing systems, comprising pictographic scripts, ideographic scripts, analytic transitional scripts, phonetic scripts, and alphabetic scripts. In practice, writing systems are classified according to the primary type of symbols used, and typically include exceptional cases where symbols function differently. For example, logographs found within phonetic systems like English include the
ampersand and the numerals , , etc.which correspond to specific words (
and,
zero,
one, etc.) and not to the underlying sounds. Most writing systems can be described as mixed systems that feature elements of both phonography and morphography.
Logographic systems A
logogram is a character that represents a morpheme within a language.
Chinese characters represent the only major logographic writing systems still in use: they have historically been used to write the
varieties of Chinese, as well as
Japanese,
Korean,
Vietnamese, and other languages of the
Sinosphere. As each character represents a single unit of meaning, thousands are required to write all the words of a language. If the logograms do not adequately represent all meanings and words of a language, written language can be confusing or ambiguous to the reader. Logograms are sometimes conflated with
ideograms, symbols which graphically represent abstract ideas; most linguists now reject this characterization. Chinese characters are often semantic–phonetic compounds, which include a component related to the character's meaning, and a component that gives a hint for its pronunciation.
Syllabaries written in
Cherokee using both the
Cherokee syllabary (top) and
Latin alphabet (middle), alongside English (bottom) A
syllabary is a set of written symbols (called
syllabograms) that represent either
syllables or
morasa unit of
prosody that is often but not always a syllable in length. Syllabaries are best suited to languages with relatively simple syllable structure, since a different symbol is needed for every syllable. For example, the
Japanese writing system has two
kana syllabaries (
hiragana and
katakana) intended for use in distinct circumstances; both have syllabograms for each of the roughly 100 moras found in Japanese. By contrast, English features complex syllable structures, with a relatively large inventory of vowels and complex
consonant clustersfor a total of 15–16 thousand distinct syllables. Some syllabaries have larger inventories: the
Yi script contains 756 different symbols.
Alphabets An
alphabet uses symbols (called
letters) that correspond to the phonemes of a language, e.g. its vowels and consonants. However, these correspondences are rarely uncomplicated, and
spelling is often mediated by other factors than just which sounds are used by a speaker. The word
alphabet is derived from
alpha and
beta, the names for the first two letters in the
Greek alphabet. An
abjad is an alphabet whose letters only represent the consonantal sounds of a language. They were the first alphabets to develop historically, with most used to write
Semitic languages, and originally deriving from the
Proto-Sinaitic script. The
morphology of Semitic languages is particularly suited to this approach, as the denotation of vowels is generally redundant. Optional markings for vowels may be used for some abjads, but are generally limited to applications like education. Many pure alphabets were derived from abjads through the addition of dedicated vowel letters, as with the derivation of the Greek alphabet from the Phoenician alphabet .
Abjad is the word for "alphabet" in Arabic, and analogously derives from the traditional order of letters in the
Arabic alphabet (, , , ). printed using
Balinese script An
abugida is a type of alphabet with symbols corresponding to consonant–vowel pairs, where basic symbols for each consonant are associated with an
inherent vowel by default, and other possible vowels for each consonant are indicated via predictable modifications made to the basic symbols. In an abugida, there may be a sign for
k with no vowel, but also one for
ka (if
a is the inherent vowel), and
ke is written by modifying the
ka sign in a way consistent with how
la would be modified to get
le. In many abugidas, modification consists of the addition of a vowel sign; other possibilities include rotation of the basic sign, or addition of
diacritics. While true syllabaries have one symbol per syllable and no systematic visual similarity, the graphic similarity in most abugidas stems from their origins as abjadswith added symbols comprising markings for different vowels added onto a pre-existing base symbol. The largest single group of abugidas is the
Brahmic family of scripts, however, which includes nearly all the scripts used in India and Southeast Asia. The name
abugida was derived by linguist
Peter T. Daniels () from the first four characters of an order of the
Geʽez script, which is used for certain Nilo-Saharan and Afro-Asiatic languages of Ethiopia and Eritrea.
Featural systems Originally proposed as a category by
Geoffrey Sampson, a
featural system uses symbols representing sub-phonetic elementse.g. those traits that can be used to distinguish between and analyse a language's phonemes, such as their
voicing or
place of articulation. The only prominent example of a featural system is the
hangul script used to write Korean, where featural symbols are combined into letters, which are in turn joined into syllabic blocks. Many scholars, including
John DeFrancis, reject a characterization of hangul as a featural systemwith arguments including that Korean writers do not themselves think in these terms when writingor question the viability of Sampson's category altogether. As hangul was consciously created by literate experts, Daniels characterizes it as a "sophisticated
grammatogeny"a writing system intentionally designed for a specific purpose, as opposed to having evolved gradually over time. Other featural grammatogenies include
shorthands developed by professionals and
constructed scripts created by hobbyists and creatives, like the
Tengwar script designed by
J. R. R. Tolkien to write the Elven languages he also constructed. Many of these feature advanced graphic designs corresponding to phonological properties. The basic unit of writing in these systems can map to anything from phonemes to words. It has been shown that even the Latin script has sub-character features in its lowercase letters. == Classification by graphical properties ==