Cree dialects, except for those spoken in eastern
Quebec and
Labrador, are traditionally written using
Cree syllabics, a variant of
Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, but can be written with the
Latin script as well. Both
writing systems represent the language phonetically. Cree is always written from left to right horizontally. The easternmost dialects are written using the Latin script exclusively. The dialects of Plains Cree, Woods Cree, and western Swampy Cree use
Western Cree syllabics and the dialects of eastern Swampy Cree, East Cree, Moose Cree, and Naskapi use
Eastern Cree syllabics.
Syllabics In Cree syllabics, each symbol, which represents a
consonant, can be written four ways, each direction representing its corresponding
vowel. The following tables show the
syllabaries of Eastern and Western Cree dialects, respectively: Speakers of various Cree dialects have begun creating dictionaries to serve their communities. Some projects, such as the Cree Language Resource Project, are developing an online bilingual Cree dictionary for the Cree language. Cree syllabics has not commonly or traditionally used the
period (). Instead, either a full-stop glyph () or a double em-width space has been used between words to signal the transition from one sentence to the next.
Romanization For
Plains Cree and
Swampy Cree, Standard Roman Orthography (SRO) uses fourteen letters of the
ISO basic Latin alphabet to denote the dialect's ten consonants (, , , , , , , , and ) and seven vowels (, , , , , and ).
Upper case letters are not used. For more details on the phonetic values of these letters or variant orthographies, see the
§ Phonology section above. The sound of
Woods Cree is written , or in more recent material. Plains and Swampy material written to be cross-dialectical often modify to and to when those are pronounced in Swampy.) full punctuation is used. {{interlinear|indent=2|lang=cr-Latn Additionally, other
interrogatives (
where, when, what, why, who) can be used, as in other languages, and questions marks can thus be used for such questions in Cree as well. Hyphenation can be used to separate a particle from the root word that it prefixes, especially particles that precede verbs ("preverbs" or "indeclinable preverbs") or nouns ("prenouns" or "indeclinable prenouns"). One example is ('start speaking!'), derived from . Note that can neither stand alone as a separate word, nor is it an essential part of a stem. There are some more complex situations where it is difficult to determine whether an element is a particle. Some frequently used compound words can be written as unhyphenated. Stress can be predicted in some cases based on hyphenation.
Vowel reduction or vowel dropping, as is common of unstressed short
i , is not denoted in order to be more cross-dialectal—instead of using apostrophes, the full unreduced vowels are written. Representation of
sandhi (such as → ) can be written or not written, as sandhi representation introduces greater complexity. There are additional rules regarding
h and
iy that may not match a given speaker's speech, to enable a standardized transcription. ==Contact languages==