List of languages by writing system
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Below is a list of languages sorted by writing system (by alphabetical order).
Contents
- 1 Afaka syllabary
- 2 Anatolian alphabets
- 3 Arabic script
- 4 Aramaic alphabet
- 5 Armenian script
- 6 Borama script
- 7 Brahmic family and derivatives
- 7.1 Assamese-Bengali
- 7.2 Balinese script
- 7.3 Baybayin script
- 7.4 Buhid script
- 7.5 Burmese script
- 7.6 Chakma
- 7.7 Devanagari
- 7.8 Dhives Akuru
- 7.9 Gujarati script
- 7.10 Gurmukhi script
- 7.11 Hanunó'o script
- 7.12 Javanese script (Hanacaraka)
- 7.13 Kaithi script
- 7.14 Kannada script
- 7.15 Khmer script
- 7.16 Khojki
- 7.17 Khudawadi
- 7.18 Lao script
- 7.19 Lepcha script
- 7.20 Limbu script
- 7.21 Lontara script (Buginese)
- 7.22 Malayalam script
- 7.23 Meitei Mayek
- 7.24 Modi
- 7.25 Oriya script
- 7.26 'Phags-pa script
- 7.27 Ranjana
- 7.28 Saurashtra
- 7.29 Sinhala script
- 7.30 Tagbanwa script
- 7.31 Tamil script
- 7.32 Telugu script
- 7.33 Thaana script
- 7.34 Thai script
- 7.35 Tibetan script
- 8 Canadian Aboriginal script
- 9 Caucasian Albanian alphabet
- 10 Cherokee script
- 11 Coptic alphabet
- 12 Cyrillic script
- 13 Ge'ez script (Eritrean and Ethiopic)
- 14 Georgian script
- 15 Glagolitic alphabet
- 16 Gothic alphabet
- 17 Greek script
- 18 Chinese characters and derivatives
- 19 Hangul
- 20 Hebrew script
- 21 Old Italic script
- 22 Kaddare script
- 23 Kana
- 24 Khitan scripts
- 25 Latin script
- 26 Mesoamerican scripts
- 27 Mongolian and related scripts
- 28 Munda scripts
- 29 N'Ko script
- 30 Naxi script
- 31 Nsibidi
- 32 Ogham
- 33 Osmanya script
- 34 Pahawh Hmong
- 35 Old Permic alphabet
- 36 Runic script
- 37 Old Turkic script
- 38 Tifinagh
- 39 Yi script
- 40 References
Afaka syllabary[edit]
- Ndyuka (on occasion)
Anatolian alphabets[edit]
- Anatolian languages (extinct)
Arabic script[edit]
and many other varieties of Arabic.
- Azeri (Iran only)
- Arwi
- Balochi
- Balti
- Bashkir
- Belarusian (on occasion)
- Berber
- Bosnian (formerly)
- Brahui
- Burushaski (on occasion)
- Chinese in the Arabic-derived Xiao'erjing alphabet
- Dogri (also uses Devanāgarī in India and Takri script)
- Dyula
- French in Algeria and other parts of North Africa during the French colonial period.
- Fulani (on occasion)
- Greek (on occasion in certain areas of Greece and Anatolia)
- Hausa (on occasion)
- Judeo-Arabic languages
- Judaeo-Spanish (until the 20th century)
- Kanuri (on occasion)
- Kashmiri
- Kazakh in China
- Kurdish (Iran and Iraq)
- Kyrgyz
- Malagasy (until the 19th century)
- Malay (14th - 20th century)
- Mazanderani
- Mozarabic (now extinct)
- Nobiin (algongside Latin script)
- Ottoman Turkish (extinct)
- Pashtu
- Persian (Iran and Afghanistan)
- Punjabi (Pakistan)
- Rohingya (also uses the Latin script)
- Salar
- Saraiki
- Sindhi
- Somali (see Wadaad's writing)
- Spanish (before 16th century, a.k.a. Aljamiado)
- Swahili (on occasion)
- Talysh
- Tatar
- Tausug
- Tuareg
- Turkmen (on occasion in Iran and Afghanistan).
- Urdu
- Uyghur
- Uzbek
- Wolof known as Wolofal
- Yoruba in the 17th century with the Ajami script
Aramaic alphabet[edit]
- Arabic (see Garshuni)
- Assyrian Neo-Aramaic
- Bohtan Neo-Aramaic
- Chaldean Neo-Aramaic
- Hertevin
- Koy Sanjaq Surat
- Senaya
- Syriac
- Turoyo (also has new Latin-based script)
Armenian script[edit]
Borama script[edit]
Brahmic family and derivatives[edit]
Assamese-Bengali[edit]
Balinese script[edit]
Baybayin script[edit]
- Ilokano (formerly)
- Kapampangan (formerly)
- Pangasinan (formerly)
- Tagalog (formerly)
- Bikol language (formerly)
- Visayan languages (formerly)
Buhid script[edit]
Burmese script[edit]
Chakma[edit]
Devanagari[edit]
- Hindi
- Sanskrit
- Marathi
- Maithili
- Bhojpuri
- Magadhi
- Nepali
- Sindhi (also written in Arabic)
- Konkani (also written in Latin, Arabic and Kannada)
- Kashmiri
- Bodo
- Dogri
- Santali
- Chhattisgarhi
- Nepal Bhasa
Dhives Akuru[edit]
- Divehi (Maldivian)
Gujarati script[edit]
Gurmukhi script[edit]
- Punjabi (also written in Shahmukhi, a variant of the Arabic script)
Hanunó'o script[edit]
Javanese script (Hanacaraka)[edit]
Kaithi script[edit]
Kannada script[edit]
Khmer script[edit]
Khojki[edit]
- Sindhi (formerly)
Khudawadi[edit]
- Sindhi (formerly)
Lao script[edit]
Lepcha script[edit]
Limbu script[edit]
Lontara script (Buginese)[edit]
- Buginese (formerly)
Malayalam script[edit]
Meitei Mayek[edit]
Modi[edit]
- Marathi (formerly)
Oriya script[edit]
'Phags-pa script[edit]
- Chinese (formerly)
- Mongolian (formerly)
- Sanskrit (formerly)
- Tibetan (for decorative purposes)
- Uyghur (formerly)
Ranjana[edit]
Saurashtra[edit]
Sinhala script[edit]
Tagbanwa script[edit]
Tamil script[edit]
Telugu script[edit]
Thaana script[edit]
Thai script[edit]
Tibetan script[edit]
- Tibetan
- Dzongkha
- Ladakhi
- Zhang-Zhung (extinct)
Canadian Aboriginal script[edit]
Caucasian Albanian alphabet[edit]
- Udi (formerly)
Cherokee script[edit]
Coptic alphabet[edit]
- Coptic language (extinct, still in use liturgically)
Cyrillic script[edit]
Main article: Languages written in a Cyrillic alphabet
- Belarusian (also Latin script)
- Bosnian (also Latin script)
- Bulgarian
- Judaeo-Spanish (also Latin script)
- Kazakh
- Kyrgyz
- Macedonian
- Mongolian (also Mongolian script)
- Russian
- Serbian (also Latin script)
- Ukrainian
- Persian (Tajikistan and Uzbekistan)
Bosnian Cyrillic alphabet (bosančica)[edit]
Ge'ez script (Eritrean and Ethiopic)[edit]
Georgian script[edit]
- Georgian
- Laz (sometimes Latin)
- Mingrelian
- Svan
Glagolitic alphabet[edit]
- Old Church Slavonic (extinct, still in use liturgically)
- Croatian (formerly)
Gothic alphabet[edit]
- Gothic (extinct)
Greek script[edit]
- Greek
- Coptic Egyptian
- Bactrian (extinct)
- Gaulish (extinct) - Written in both Greek and Latin scripts
- Judaeo-Spanish (also Latin script)
- Karamanli Turkish (extinct)
Chinese characters and derivatives[edit]
- Chinese
- Minority languages in China
- Dong
- Bai (obsolete)
- Miao (obsolete)
- Zhuang, with Zhuang logograms
- Japanese (kanji plus kana derivative)
- Korean (hanja) (used in academic texts and newspapers along with official documents)
- Vietnamese (Han-Nom) (used in historic or academic texts, or for artistic or aesthetic purposes, but in general use virtually extinct)
- Extinct languages
- Khitan, written in Khitan scripts
- Jurchen, written in Jurchen script
- Tangut, written in Tangut script
Hangul[edit]
Hebrew script[edit]
- Aramaic (and other writing systems)
- Bukhori
- Hebrew
- Hulaula
- Judeo-Iraqi Arabic
- Judeo-Moroccan
- Judeo-Tripolitanian Arabic
- Judeo-Tunisian Arabic
- Judeo-Portuguese
- Judeo-Spanish (originally Rashi script, and other writing systems)
- Judeo-Yemenite
- Juhuri
- Lishan Didan
- Lishana Deni
- Lishanid Noshan
- Shuadit
- Yiddish
- Zarphatic
Old Italic script[edit]
- Italic (extinct)
Kaddare script[edit]
Kana[edit]
- Japanese (plus kanji)
- Ainu slightly modified variety of katakana, which enable the ability to represent final consonants
Khitan scripts[edit]
- Khitan (extinct)
Latin script[edit]
- Afrikaans
- Albanian
- Aragonese
- Asturian
- Aymara
- Azeri (formerly used the Cyrillic script)
- Basque
- Belarusian (also uses the Cyrillic script, and occasionally the Lacinka alphabet)
- Berber / Tamazight (Algeria, Morocco, Mali, Niger)
- Bislama
- Boholano (formerly used Baybayin)
- Bosnian (also uses the Cyrillic script)
- Breton
- Catalan
- Cebuano
- Chamorro
- Cherokee (also uses Cherokee script)
- Cornish
- Corsican
- Croatian
- Cree
- Czech
- Danish
- Dutch
- English
- Esperanto
- Estonian
- Faroese
- Fijian
- Filipino (formerly used Baybayin)
- Finnish
- French
- Frisian
- Fula (Pulaar)
- Gaelic (Scottish)
- Galician
- German
- Gikuyu
- Guaraní
- Haitian
- Hausa (formerly used the Arabic script)
- Hawaiian
- Hiri Motu
- Hungarian (formerly used the Old Hungarian script)
- Icelandic
- Ido
- Igbo
- Ilocano (formerly used Baybayin)
- Indonesian
- Interlingua
- Innu-aimun
- Irish
- Italian
- Javanese (also Javanese script)
- Judeo-Spanish (also used other scripts)
- Khasi
- Kinyarwanda
- Kirundi
- Kongo
- Konkani
- Kurdish (Kurmanji)
- Latin
- Latvian
- Laz
- Leonese
- Lingala
- Lithuanian
- Luganda
- Luxembourgish
- Maori
- Malagasy
- Malay
- Maltese
- Manx
- Marshallese
- Moldovan (also uses the Cyrillic script)
- Montenegrin
- Nahuatl (after the Spanish conquest)
- Nauruan
- Navaho or Navajo
- Ndebele (Northern)
- Ndebele (Southern)
- Norwegian
- Occitan
- Oromo (formerly used the Ge'ez script)
- Palauan
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Quechua
- Romanian (formerly used the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet)
- Romansh
- Samoan
- Scottish
- Serbian (officially uses the Cyrillic script)
- Seychellois creole
- Shona
- Slovak
- Slovene
- Somali (formerly used the Arabic script and the Osmanya script)
- Sotho (Northern)
- Sotho (Southern)
- Spanish
- Swahili
- Swedish
- Swati
- Tagalog (formerly used Baybayin)
- Tahitian
- Tatar (formerly used the Arabic script, then Janalif, and then the Cyrillic script)
- Tetum
- Tok Pisin
- Tongan
- Tsonga
- Tswana
- Tunisian Arabic (also uses Arabic script)
- Turkish (formerly used the Arabic script)
- Turkmen (formerly used the Cyrillic script)
- Turoyo (formerly used the Syriac alphabet)
- Uzbek (formerly used the Arabic script and then the Cyrillic script; the latter still in widespread use)
- Venda
- Vietnamese (formerly used Han-Nom)
- Volapük
- Võro
- Walloon
- Welsh
- Wolof
- Xhosa
- Yoruba
- Zulu
- Zazaki
Mesoamerican scripts[edit]
Epi-Olmec script[edit]
(Extinct)
- Olmec (Extinct)
Maya script[edit]
(Almost extinct although still used in some areas)
- Achi
- Akatek
- Awakatek
- Chicomuceltec (Extinct)
- Chontal
- Ch'ol
- Ch'olti' (Extinct)
- Ch'orti'
- Chuj
- Huastec
- Itza'
- Ixil
- Jakaltek
- Kaqchikel
- Kaqchikel–K'iche'
- K'iche'
- Lacandon
- Mam
- Mocho'
- Mopan
- Poqomam
- Poqomchi'
- Q'anjob'al
- Q'eqchi'
- Sakapultek
- Sipakapense
- Tektitek
- Tojolab'al
- Tzeltal
- Tzotzil
- Tz'utujil
- Yucatec
Mixtec script[edit]
(Almost extinct although still used in some areas)
Nahuat hieroglyphs[edit]
(Now uses Spanish alphabet)
Olmec script[edit]
(Extinct)
- Olmec (Extinct)
Zapotec script[edit]
- Aloápam Zapotec
- Amatlán Zapotec
- Asunción Mixtepec Zapotec
- Ayoquezco Zapotec
- Cajonos Zapotec
- Chichicápam Zapotec
- Choápam Zapotec
- Coatecas Altas Zapotec
- Santo Domingo Coatlán Zapotec
- El Alto Zapotec
- Elotepec Zapotec
- Guevea Zapotec
- Güilá Zapotec
- Isthmus Zapotec
- Lachiguiri Zapotec
- Lachixío Zapotec
- Lapaguía Zapotec
- Loxicha Zapotec
- Mazaltepec Zapotec
- Miahuatlán Zapotec
- Mitla Zapotec
- San Juan Mixtepec Zapotec
- Ocotlán Zapotec
- Ozolotepec Zapotec
- Petapa Zapotec
- Quiavicuzas Zapotec
- Quioquitani Zapotec
- Rincón Zapotec
- San Agustín Mixtepec Zapotec
- San Baltázar Loxicha Zapotec
- Guelavía Zapotec
- Quiatoni Zapotec
- San Vicente Zapotec
- Santa Catarina Albarradas Zapotec
- Yatzeche Zapotec
- Quiegolani Zapotec
- Xánica Zapotec
- Albarradas Zapotec
- Ixtlán Zapotec
- Yavesía Zapotec
- Rincón Zapotec
- Tabaá Zapotec
- Tejalapan Zapotec
- Texmelucan Zapotec
- Tilquiapan Zapotec
- Tlacolulita Zapotec
- Totomachapan Zapotec
- Xadani Zapotec
- Xanaguía Zapotec
- Yalálag Zapotec
- Ixtlán Zapotec
- Yatee Zapotec
- Yatzachi Zapotec
- San Bartolo Yautepec Zapotec
- Zaachila Zapotec
- Zaniza Zapotec
- Zoogocho Zapotec
Takalik Abaj and Kaminaljuyú scripts[edit]
[edit]
Old Uyghur alphabet[edit]
- Uyghur (formerly)
Mongolian script[edit]
- Mongolian (also Cyrillic)
Manchu script[edit]
Munda scripts[edit]
Sorang Sompeng[edit]
Ol Cemet'[edit]
Varang Kshiti[edit]
N'Ko script[edit]
Naxi script[edit]
- Naxi (obsolete)
Nsibidi[edit]
Ogham[edit]
Osmanya script[edit]
Pahawh Hmong[edit]
Old Permic alphabet[edit]
- Komi (formerly)
Runic script[edit]
- Proto-Norse inscriptions
- Old Norse (also Latin script)
- Old Danish (also Latin script)
- Old English/Anglo-Saxon (also Latin script)
- Old Frisian (also Latin script)
Old Turkic script[edit]
- Old Turkic language (extinct)
Old Hungarian alphabet[edit]
- Hungarian (also Latin script)
Tifinagh[edit]
Yi script[edit]
References[edit]
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