In syllabics, syllables are separated by spaces, and words optionally by a point (period) as the
word divider. Old transcriptions of Algonquian languages by Westerners frequently separated the syllables of the languages with hyphens, and the period would be used every few words at the end of a sentence, so these practices may be historically related. Great Lakes syllabics is an
alphabet, with separate letters for consonants and vowels. However, it is written in syllabic blocks, like the
Korean alphabet. Moreover, the vowel is not written unless it forms a syllable by itself. That is, the letter transcribes both the consonant and the syllable . In most Great Lakes syllabics alphabets, the letter for the vowel has been reduced to its dot, which has become a
diacritic on the consonant of the syllable. Both phenomena (ignoring an
inherent vowel and writing other vowels as diacritics) are characteristics of a subclass of alphabet, such as
Devanagari, known variously as
abugidas or
alphasyllabaries. The
aspirated consonants are distinguished from the
tenuis as
digraphs with the letter , but the distinction is frequently ignored, making syllabics a
defective script for consonants as well as vowels. There are several alphabets based on the script. Samples of the Fox alphabet are in Jones (1906), and Walker (1981, 1996); the latter includes handwriting samples for each letter or compound letter from four different early 20th century Fox writers. Samples of the Potawatomi alphabet are in Walker (1981, 1986). Goddard (1996) includes a postcard written in the Fox script, and Kinkade and Mattina (1996) includes a page of text in the Fox alphabet.
Fox alphabet The syllabary symbols used by the Fox, Sauk, and Kickapoo groups have only minor differences. This section outlines the main characteristics of the Fox alphabet, which is the most completely described in published sources. A brief discussion of the Sauk alphabet has also been published. Fox speakers refer to the script in both Fox and English as the , referring to the first row of consonant-plus-vowel syllables in traditional presentations of the script. The core component of the Fox presentation is 48 syllables arranged in twelve rows and four columns. One row is the four vowel letters by themselves. The others each consist of one of the eleven consonant letters by itself (with the inherent vowel understood) and followed by each of the three combining vowel letters. The script accommodates all the consonant sounds of the Fox language with the exception of , which has no letter. No distinction is made between long and short vowels. A sequence of two identical vowel letters is read as two syllables, typically with an assumed between the two vowels. Syllables are separated by spaces. Punctuation consists of a
word divider, "which variously appears as a dot, a small line, or an or .... Many writers do not use the word divider, being particularly apt to omit it at line ends, and some never use it." Jones (1906) indicated that the dot or small line were used as word dividers and the cross as a sentence divider, but subsequent study of Fox text manuscripts does not support this claim. Several variants of the script existed among Fox speakers, in which various symbols were substituted for combinations of consonant and vowel letters. These variants were apparently originally used as secret codes and were not widely utilized. Samples of the variant forms are in Walker (1981), taken from Jones (1906). There are also minor variations in the form of the script used by Kickapoo speakers, and Kickapoo speakers living in Mexico have added orthographic modifications based on Spanish. == Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) adoption ==