Crosswords
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Joined 16 days ago
Cake day: October 5th, 2025
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Would be nice to include boycat vpn
shoebum@lemmy.zipto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Do languages that use non-Latin alphabets (Asian, Cyrillic, Greek, Hebrew) have upper and lower case letters? What about serif or sans-serif? How do they show emphasis?1·9 days agoA lot of excellent observations.
But you did answer your question when you mentioned most older scripts were illiterate (in the academic sense).
Illiterate scripts inherently carry a lot of information whose priority is to convey the message independent of the listener (I’m guessing)
I think languages that can convey tone are awesome. It makes the language richer and less ambiguous
shoebum@lemmy.zipto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Do languages that use non-Latin alphabets (Asian, Cyrillic, Greek, Hebrew) have upper and lower case letters? What about serif or sans-serif? How do they show emphasis?10·10 days agoHindi or any Indic languages (popular ones) have any case differentiation.
Mostly because emphasis on any word is not literal it is tonal.
So there are these things called - matra (12 matras in hindi)
They are symbols representing inflection/emphasis etc. and we can combine them with each character of the alphabet and convey tone.
I agree about how languages leave out groups that can indicate a lot about the script and its people.
And imposing scripts do kill that implicit.
But don’t you think that’s how most new languages are created. I’m assuming there must have been so many language impositions throughout history.
In fact hindi was created by Brits because hindi was not a single language till 1600s
Having said that, what was the core question that you wanted to address?