Difference between revisions of "Letso-Vaniuan script"
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| fam2 = [[Proto-Ekuosian script]] | | fam2 = [[Proto-Ekuosian script]] | ||
| fam3 = [[Old Staloan script|Old Staloan]] | | fam3 = [[Old Staloan script|Old Staloan]] | ||
| sisters = [[Adzamic script|Adzamic]] | | sisters = {{hlist|[[Adzamic script|Adzamic]] |[[Letso-Halarian script|Letso-Halarian]] |[[Neviran script|Neviran]]}} | ||
| children = | | children = | ||
|sample=Vaniuan alphabet sample.png | |||
| unicode = | | unicode = | ||
| footnotes = | | footnotes = |
Latest revision as of 18:14, 18 February 2021
Letso-Vaniuan | |
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Type | Alphabet |
Languages | Various, examples include Balak, Koman, and Vosan |
Time period | c. 500 CE – present |
Parent systems | Halarian logograms
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Sister systems |
The Letso-Vaniuan script, also known simply as the Vaniuan script or the Vucheshian script, is an alphabetic writing system widely used across Sahar. The script is directly descended from the Old Staloan version of the Letso-Halarian script, itself a descendant of the Proto-Ekuosian script, which in turn was derived from Halarian logograms. It is natively used to write various Vaniuan languages, the most widely spoken including Balak, Koman, and Vosan. Due to Vaniuan colonialism in the 18th – 20th centuries, the script was also adopted by various languages in Puzimm and Lahan.