Eskayan script
Eskayan script | |
---|---|
Type | syllabary |
Languages | Eskayan |
Creator |
Mariano Datahan Attributed to Pinay, ancestor of the Eskaya clan |
Time period | early 1900s to present |
Eskayan is the constructed script of the auxiliary Eskayan language of the island of Bohol in the Philippines. Like Yugtun and Fox script, it is based on cursive Latin.
In roman script, the unusual trigraph ⟨chd⟩ has approximately the sound of English j.
Eskayan has letters for V, CV, VC, and CCV syllables (where CCV is either CrV or ClV). For CVC, the final consonant is written with a subscript character, as shown in the table at right. A basic subset of the script, the 46-character abidiha, is mixed alphabetic/syllabic; the first 25 letters are alphabetic or function as either a consonant or a syllable ending in /i/ (the Spanish name of the letter). The full syllabary, or simplit, comprises about 1,065 characters, the precise number depending on the text, with some rendering syllables which do not actually occur in the language.[1]
References
- ↑ Kelly, Piers. 2012. "Your word against mine: How a rebel language and script of the Philippines was created, suppressed, recovered and contested." The Australian Journal of Anthropology 23 (3):357-378
External links
- Eskayan script at Omniglot: 132 syllables, plus digits
- Eskayan script at U Hawaii: The abidiha, numerals, and punctuation