Information about Latin Alphabet

Latin alphabet
TypeAlphabet
LanguagesLatin and Romance languages; most languages of Europe; Romanizations exist for practically all known languages.
Time period~700 B.C. to the present.
Parent systemsProto-Canaanite alphabet
 → Phoenician alphabet
  → Greek alphabet
   → Old Italic alphabet
    → Latin alphabet
Child systemsNumerous: see Alphabets derived from the Latin
Sister systemsCyrillic
Coptic
Armenian
Runic/Futhark
Unicode rangeSee Latin characters in Unicode
ISO 15924Latn
History of the alphabet
Middle Bronze Age 18–15th c. BC
Meroitic 3rd c. BC
Hangul 1443
Zhuyin 1913
complete genealogy
The Latin alphabet, also called the Roman alphabet, is the most widely used alphabetic writing system in the world today. Apart from Latin itself, the alphabet was adapted to the direct descendants of Latin (the Romance languages), Germanic, Celtic and some Slavic languages from the Middle Ages, and finally to most languages of Europe. With the age of colonialism and Christian proselytism, the alphabet was spread overseas, and applied to Amerindian, Indigenous Australian, Austronesian, Vietnamese, Malay and Indonesian languages. More recently, Western linguists have also tended to prefer the Latin alphabet or the International Phonetic Alphabet (itself largely based on the Latin alphabet) when they transcribe or devise written standards for non-European languages; see for example the African reference alphabet.

In modern usage, the term Latin alphabet is used for any straightforward derivation of the alphabet used by the Romans. These variants may discard some letters (e.g. the Italian alphabet) or add extra letters (e.g. the Polish alphabet) to or from the classical Roman script, and many letter shapes have changed over the centuries — such as the lower-case letters. The Latin alphabet evolved from the western variety of the Greek alphabet, called the Cumaean alphabet.

Evolution



It is generally held that the Latins adopted the Cumae alphabet‎, a variant of the Greek alphabet in the 7th century BC from Cumae, a Greek colony in southern Italy. Roman legend credited the introduction to one Evander, son of the Sibyl, supposedly 60 years before the Trojan war, but there is no historically sound basis to this tale. From the Cumae alphabet, the Etruscan alphabet was derived and the Latins finally adopted 21 of the original 26 Etruscan letters.

Later, probably during the 3rd century BC, the Latin alphabet replaced the Z — unneeded to write early Latin — with the new letter G in the same position. An attempt by the emperor Claudius to introduce three additional letters was short-lived, but after the Roman conquest of Greece in the first century BC, Latin adopted the Greek letters Y and Z — or, in the case of Z, readopted the letter — and added them to the alphabet's end. Thus it was that during the classical Latin period the Latin alphabet contained 23 letters:
Original Latin alphabet of the 7th c. BC
ABCDEFZ
HIKLMNO
PQRSTVX


Letter ABCDEFGH
Latin nameāēefha
Latin pronunciation (IPA)/aː//beː//keː//deː//eː//ef//geː//haː/
Letter IKLMNOPQ
Latin nameīelemenō
Latin pronunciation (IPA)/iː//kaː//el//em//en//oː//peː//kʷuː/
Letter RSTVXYZ
Latin nameeresūexī Graecazēta
Latin pronunciation (IPA)/er//es//teː//uː//eks//iː 'graika//'zeːta/


Enlarge picture
The Duenos inscription, dated to the 6th century BC, shows the earliest known forms of the Old Latin alphabet.


The Latin names of some of the letters are disputed. In general, however, the Romans did not use the traditional (Semitic-derived) names as in Greek: the names of the stop consonant letters were formed by adding /eː/ to the sound (except for K and Q, which needed different vowels to distinguish them from C) and the names of the continuants consisted either of the bare sound, or the sound preceded by /e/. The letter Y when introduced was probably called hy /hyː/ as in Greek (the name upsilon being not yet in use) but was changed to i Graeca ("Greek i") as Latin speakers had difficulty distinguishing /i/ and /y/. Z was given its Greek name, zeta. For the Latin sounds represented by the various letters see Latin spelling and pronunciation; for the names of the letters in English see English alphabet.

Roman cursive script, also called majuscule cursive and capitalis cursive, was the everyday form of handwriting used for writing letters, by merchants writing business accounts, by schoolchildren learning the Latin alphabet, and even emperors issuing commands. A more formal style of writing was based on Roman square capitals, but cursive was used for quicker, informal writing. It was most commonly used from about the 1st century BC to the 3rd century, but it probably existed earlier than that.

Medieval and later developments

It was not until the Middle Ages that the letter W was added to the Latin alphabet (to represent sounds from the Germanic languages which did not exist as independent phonemes in the Romance languages), and only after the Renaissance did J (representing a consonantal I) and U (representing a vocalic V) come to be treated as individual letters. Prior to that, they had been merely glyph variants of I and V, respectively.

The lower case (minuscule) letters developed in the Middle Ages from New Roman Cursive, first as the uncial script, and later as minuscule script. The old capital Roman letters were retained for formal inscriptions and for emphasis in written documents. The languages that use the Latin alphabet generally use capital letters to begin paragraphs and sentences and proper nouns. The rules for capitalization have changed over time, and different languages have varied in their rules for capitalization. Old English, for example, was rarely written with even proper nouns capitalised; whereas Modern English of the 18th century had frequently all nouns capitalised, in the same way that Modern German is today, e.g. "All the Sisters of the old Town had seen the Birds".

Spread of the Latin alphabet

The Latin alphabet spread from the Italian Peninsula, along with the Latin language, to the lands surrounding the Mediterranean Sea with the expansion of the Roman Empire. The eastern half of the Roman Empire, including Greece, Asia Minor, the Levant, and Egypt, continued to use Greek as a lingua franca, but Latin was widely spoken in the western half of the Empire, and as the western Romance languages, including French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and Catalan, evolved out of Latin, they continued to use and adapt the Latin alphabet. With the spread of Western Christianity the Latin alphabet gradually spread to the peoples of northern Europe who spoke Celtic languages (displacing the Ogham alphabet) or Germanic languages (displacing their earlier Runic alphabets), as well as to the speakers of Baltic languages, such as Lithuanian and Latvian, and several (non-Indo-European) Finno-Ugric languages, most notably Hungarian, Finnish and Estonian. During the Middle Ages the Latin alphabet also came into use among the peoples speaking West Slavic languages and several South Slavic Languages, including the ancestors of modern Poles, Czechs, Croats, Slovenes, and Slovaks, as these peoples adopted Roman Catholicism; the speakers of East Slavic languages generally adopted both Orthodox Christianity and the Cyrillic alphabet.

As late as 1492, the Latin alphabet was limited primarily to the languages spoken in western, northern and central Europe. The Orthodox Christian Slavs of eastern and southeastern Europe mostly used the Cyrillic alphabet, and the Greek alphabet was still in use by Greek-speakers around the eastern Mediterranean. The Arabic alphabet was widespread within Islam, both among Arabs and non-Arab nations like the Iranians, Indonesians, Malays, and Turkic peoples. Most of the rest of Asia used a variety of Brahmic alphabets or the Chinese script.

Enlarge picture
Latin alphabet world distribution. The dark green areas shows the countries where this alphabet is the sole main script. The light green shows the countries where the alphabet co-exists with other scripts.


Over the past 500 years, the Latin alphabet has spread around the world. It spread to the Americas, Oceania, and parts of Asia, Africa, and the Pacific with European colonization, along with the Spanish, Portuguese, English, French, and Dutch languages. In the late eighteenth century, the Romanians adopted the Latin alphabet, primarily because Romanian is a Romance language; although, as the Romanians were predominantly Orthodox Christians, until the nineteenth century their Church used the Cyrillic alphabet. Vietnam, under French rule, adapted the Latin alphabet for use with the Vietnamese language, which had previously used Chinese characters. The Latin alphabet is also used for many Austronesian languages, including Tagalog and the other languages of the Philippines, and the official Malaysian and Indonesian languages, replacing earlier Arabic and indigenous Brahmic alphabets. L. L. Zamenhof used the Latin alphabet as the basis for the alphabet of Esperanto.

Some glyph forms from the Latin alphabet served as the basis for the Cherokee syllabary developed by Sequoyah, however the sounds of the final syllabary were completely different.

In 1928, as part of Kemal Atatürk's reforms, Turkey adopted the Latin alphabet for the Turkish language, replacing the Arabic alphabet. Most of Turkic-speaking peoples of the former USSR, including Tatars, Bashkirs, Azeri, Kazakh, Kyrgyz and others, used the Latin-based Uniform Turkic alphabet in the 1930s, but in the 1940s all those alphabets were replaced by Cyrillic. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, several of the newly-independent Turkic-speaking republics, namely Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan, as well as Romanian-speaking Moldova, have officially adopted the Latin alphabet for Azeri, Uzbek, Turkmen, and Moldovan Romanian, respectively. Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and the breakaway region of Transnistria kept the Cyrillic alphabet, chiefly due to their close ties with Russia. In the 1970s, the People's Republic of China developed an official transliteration of Mandarin Chinese into the Latin alphabet, called Pinyin, although use of the Pinyin has been very rare outside educational and tourism purposes.

West Slavic and most South Slavic languages use the Latin alphabet rather than the Cyrillic, a reflection of the dominant religion practiced among those peoples. Among these, Polish uses a variety of diacritics and digraphs to represent special phonetic values, as well as the letter ł, for a sound which was originally the so-called dark L, but has become similar to an English w in modern varieties of the language. Czech uses diacritics as in Dvořák — the term háček (caron) originates from Czech. Croatian and the Latin version of Serbian use carons in č, š, ž, an acute in ć and a bar in đ. The languages of Eastern Orthodox Slavs generally use the Cyrillic alphabet instead, which is more closely based on the Greek alphabet. The Serbian language uses the two alphabets.

Extensions

In the course of its use, the Latin alphabet was adapted for use in new languages, sometimes representing phonemes not found in languages that were already written with the Roman characters. To represent these new sounds, extensions were therefore created, be it by adding diacritics to existing letters, by joining multiple letters together to make ligatures, by creating completely new forms, or by assigning a special function to pairs or triplets of letters. These new forms are given a place in the alphabet by defining a collating sequence, which is often language-dependent.

New forms

Eth (Ğ ğ) and the Runic letters thorn (Ş ş), and wynn (Ƿ ƿ) were added to the Old English alphabet. Eth and thorn were later replaced with th, and wynn with the new letter w. Although these three letters are no longer part of the English alphabet, eth and thorn are still used in the modern Icelandic alphabet.

Some West, Central and Southern African languages use a few additional letters which have a similar sound value to their equivalents in the IPA. For example, Ga uses the letters Ɛ ɛ, Ŋ ŋ and Ɔ ɔ and Adangme uses Ɛ ɛ and Ɔ ɔ. Hausa uses Ɓ ɓ and Ɗ ɗ for implosives and Ƙ ƙ for an ejective. Africanists have standardized these into the African reference alphabet.

The Azerbaijani alphabet has adopted the letter schwa (ə) from the International Phonetic Alphabet, using it to represent not the schwa sound but [æ].

Ligatures

Main article: Ligature (typography)
A ligature is a fusion of two or more ordinary letters into a new glyph or character. Examples are Æ from AE, Œ from OE, the abbreviation & from Latin et "and", the Dutch IJ from I and J (Note that ij is capitalised as IJ, never Ij), and the German Eszett ß, from ſs (an archaic double s; the first glyph is the archaic medial form, and the second the final form).

Diacritics

Main article: Diacritic


A diacritic, in some cases also called an accent, is a small symbol which can appear above or below a letter, or in some other position, such as the umlaut mark used in the German characters Ä, Ö, Ü. Its main function is to change the phonetic value of the letter to which it is added, but it may also modify the pronunciation of a whole syllable or word, or distinguish between homographs. As with letters, the value of diacritics is language-dependent.

Digraphs and trigraphs

Main articles: Digraph and Trigraph
A digraph is a pair of letters used to write one sound or a combination of sounds that does not correspond to the written letters in sequence. Examples in English are CH, SH, TH. A trigraph is made up of three letters, like the German SCH. In some language orthographies, digraphs and trigraphs are regarded as independent letters of the alphabet in their own right.

Collation

Main article: Collation
In some cases, such as with the Swedish symbols Å, Ä and Ö, modified letters are regarded as new individual letters in themselves, and often assigned a specific place in the alphabet for collation purposes, separate from that of the letter on which they are based. In other cases, such as with Ä, Ö, Ü in German, this is not done, letter-diacritic combinations being identified with their base letter. The same applies to digraphs and trigraphs. Different modified letters may be treated differently within a single language. For example, in Spanish the characters Ñ and LL are considered letters on their own, and are sorted between L and M, and N and O, respectively, in dictionaries, but the accented vowels Á, É, Í, Ó, Ú are not separated from the unaccented vowels A, E, I, O, U.

The English alphabet

Main articles: English alphabet and English words with diacritics
As used in modern English, the Latin alphabet consists of the following characters
Majuscule Forms (also called uppercase or capital letters)
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ


Minuscule Forms (also called lowercase or small letters)
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz


In addition the ligatures, Æ (ash) from AE (e.g. "encyclopædia"), Œ (oethel) from OE (e.g. cœlom) can be used for some words derived from Latin and Greek, and the diaeresis, is sometimes used for example on the letter ö (e.g. "coöperate") to indicate the pronunciation of "oo" as two separate vowels, rather than a single one. Outside professional papers on specific subjects that traditionally use ligatures, ligatures and diaereses are little used in modern English apart from on loan words.

Latin alphabet and international standards

By the 1960s it became apparent to the computer and telecommunications industries in the First World that a non-proprietary method of encoding characters was needed. The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) encapsulated the Latin alphabet in their (ISO/IEC 646) standard. To achieve widespread acceptance, this encapsulation was based on popular usage. As the United States held a preeminent position in both industries during the 1960s the standard was based on the already published American Standard Code for Information Interchange, better known as ASCII, which included in the character set the 26 x 2 letters of the English alphabet. Later standards issued by the ISO, for example ISO/IEC 10646 (Unicode Latin), have continued to define the 26 x 2 letters of the English alphabet as the basic Latin alphabet with extensions to handle other letters in other languages.

The ISO basic Latin alphabet
AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHhIiJjKkLlMmNnOoPpQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz
Z?

See also

Further reading

  • Jensen, Hans (1970). Sign Symbol and Script. London: George Allen and Unwin Ltd. ISBN 0-04-400021-9. . Transl. of Jensen, Hans (1958). Die Schrift in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart. VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften. , as revised by the author
  • Rix, Helmut (1993). "La scrittura e la lingua", in Cristofani, Mauro (hrsg.): Gli etruschi - Una nuova immagine. Firenze: Giunti, S.199-227. 
  • Sampson, Geoffrey (1985). Writing systems. London (etc.): Hutchinson. 
  • Wachter, Rudolf (1987). Altlateinische Inschriften: sprachliche und epigraphische Untersuchungen zu den Dokumenten bis etwa 150 v.Chr. Bern (etc.). : Peter Lang.
  • W. Sidney Allen (1978). "The names of the letters of the Latin alphabet (Appendix C)", Vox Latina — a guide to the pronunciation of classical Latin. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-22049-1 (Second edition). 
  • Biktaş, Şamil (2003). Tuğan Tel. 
  • Diacritics Project — All you need to design a font with correct accents
  • Lewis and Short Latin Dictionary on the letter G
  • Latin-Alphabet
  • Latin alphabet at omniglot.com
Sesame Street is an American educational children's television series for preschoolers and is a pioneer of the contemporary educational television standard, combining both education and entertainment.
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"ABC-DEF-GHI" is a song sung by Big Bird of Sesame Street. In recent years, it has also been sung by Elmo. It is also erroneously known as "Abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz.
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ABCs redirects here, for the Alien Big Cats, see British big cats.


An alphabet is a standardized set of letters
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Latin}}} 
Official status
Official language of: Vatican City
Used for official purposes, but not spoken in everyday speech
Regulated by: Opus Fundatum Latinitas
Roman Catholic Church
Language codes
ISO 639-1: la
ISO 639-2: lat
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Romance languages (sometimes referred to as Romanic languages) are a branch of the Indo-European language family that comprisies all the languages that descend from Latin, the language of the Roman Empire.
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The Germanic languages in Europe      Dutch (West Germanic)
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romanization (or Latinization, also spelled romanisation or Latinisation) is the representation of a word or language with the Roman (Latin) alphabet, or a system for doing so, where the original word or language uses a different writing system (or none).
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Proto-Canaanite alphabet

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

The Proto-Canaanite alphabet is an abjad of twenty-plus acrophonic glyphs, found in Levantine texts of the Late Bronze Age (from ca.
..... Click the link for more information.
Phoenician alphabet
Child systems Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
Aramaic alphabet
Greek alphabet
Many hypothesized others
Sister systems South Arabian alphabet
Unicode range U+10900 to U+1091F
ISO 15924 Phnx

Note
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Greek alphabet
Child systems Gothic
Glagolitic
Cyrillic
Coptic
Old Italic alphabet
Latin alphabet

ISO 15924 Grek

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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Old Italic
Child systems Latin alphabet, Runic alphabet
Sister systems Anatolian alphabets

ISO 15924 Ital

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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Variants of the Latin alphabet are used by the writing systems of many languages throughout the world. The tables below summarize and compare several of those alphabets.
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Cyrillic alphabet

Sister systems Latin alphabet
Coptic alphabet
Armenian
Unicode range U+0400 to U+052F
ISO 15924 Cyrl

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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Coptic alphabet

Sister systems Old Nubian
Latin
Cyrillic
Armenian
Unicode range U+2C80 to U+2CFF
U+03E2 to U+03EF
ISO 15924 Copt

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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Armenian alphabet

Sister systems Latin
Cyrillic
Coptic
Unicode range U+0530 to U+058F,
U+FB13 to U+FB17
ISO 15924 Armn

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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Runic
Child systems Younger Futhark, Anglo-Saxon Futhorc

ISO 15924 Runr

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

The Runic alphabets are a set of related alphabets using letters (known as runes
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Unicode’s Universal Character Set potentially supports over 1 million (1,114,112 = 220 + 216 or 17 × 216, hexadecimal 110000) code points.

As of Unicode 5.0.0, 102,012 (9.
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Basic Latin 0000–007F: identical to ASCII (0000–001F, 007F are control characters, 0020–003F are punctuation and Arabic numerals)
  • Latin-1 Supplement
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  • ISO 15924, Codes for the representation of names of scripts, defines two sets of codes for a number of writing systems (scripts). Each script is given both a four-letter code and a numeric one.
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    International Phonetic Alphabet

    Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

    The International
    Phonetic Alphabet
    History
    Nonstandard symbols
    Extended IPA
    Naming conventions
    IPA for English The
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    Unicode is an industry standard allowing computers to consistently represent and manipulate text expressed in any of the world's writing systems. Developed in tandem with the Universal Character Set standard and published in book form as The Unicode Standard
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    The history of the alphabet begins in Ancient Egypt, more than a millennium into the history of writing. The first pure alphabet emerged around 2000 BCE to represent the language of Semitic workers in Egypt (see Middle Bronze Age alphabets), and was derived from the
    ..... Click the link for more information.
    Middle Bronze Age alphabets are two similar undeciphered scripts, dated to be from the Middle Bronze Age (2000-1500 BCE), and believed to be ancestral to nearly all modern alphabets:
    • the Proto-Sinaitic

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    Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

    The Ugaritic alphabet is a cuneiform abjad (alphabet without vowels), used from around 1500 BC for the Ugaritic language, an extinct Canaanite language discovered in Ugarit, Syria. It has 31 distinct letters.
    ..... Click the link for more information.
    Proto-Canaanite alphabet

    Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

    The Proto-Canaanite alphabet is an abjad of twenty-plus acrophonic glyphs, found in Levantine texts of the Late Bronze Age (from ca.
    ..... Click the link for more information.
    Phoenician alphabet
    Child systems Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
    Aramaic alphabet
    Greek alphabet
    Many hypothesized others
    Sister systems South Arabian alphabet
    Unicode range U+10900 to U+1091F
    ISO 15924 Phnx

    Note
    ..... Click the link for more information.
    Paleo-Hebrew alphabet

    Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
    The Paleo-Hebrew alphabet also know as Ktav Ivri is an offshoot of the Phoenician alphabet used to write the Hebrew language from about the 10th century BCE until it began to
    ..... Click the link for more information.
    Aramaic alphabet
    Child systems Hebrew
    Nabataean
    Syriac
    Palmyrenean
    Mandaic
    Brāhmī
    Pahlavi
    Sogdian
    Kharoṣṭhī

    Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
    ..... Click the link for more information.
    History of the alphabet
    Middle Bronze Age 18–15th c. BC
    • Ugaritic 15th c. BC
    • Proto-Canaanite 14th c. BC
    • Phoenician 11th c. BC
    • Paleo-Hebrew 10th c.

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    Tibetan

    ISO 15924 Tibt

    Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
    The Tibetan script
    ..... Click the link for more information.


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