List of languages by writing system
Appearance
(Redirected from List of writing systems)
This list is not complete; you can help by adding missing items. |
Arabic Script
[change | change source]- Arabic
- Azeri (Iran)
- Balochi
- Berber
- Bosnian (also Cyrillic script and Latin script)
- Buginese (until the 20th century)
- Fulani (on occasion)
- Hausa (on occasion)
- Judaeo-Spanish (until the 20th century)
- Javanese (on occasion)
- Kanuri (on occasion)
- Kashmiri
- Kazakh in China
- Kurdish (Iran and Iraq)
- Malagasy (until the 19th century)
- Malay (14th - 17th century)
- Mazanderani
- Mozarabic (now extinct)
- Ottoman Turkish
- Pashto
- Persian
- Punjabi (Pakistan)
- Saraiki
- Sindhi
- Spanish (formerly before 16th century, a.k.a. Aljamiado)
- Sundanese (until the 20th century)
- Swahili (on occasion)
- Tajik (on occasion)
- Tausug
- Urdu
- Uyghur
- Wolio (until the 20th century)
- Yoruba (rarely see Ajami script)
Many languages of Russia and Central Asia before replacement with Latin and later Cyrillic
Armenian script
[change | change source]Borama script
[change | change source]Brahmic family and derivatives
[change | change source]Devanagari
[change | change source]- Sanskrit
- Hindi
- Marathi
- Maithili
- Bhojpuri
- Nepali
- Sindhi (also written in Arabic)
- Konkani
- Kashmiri
- Bodo
- Dogri
- Gondi,Adilabad
- Gondi, Aheri
- Andh
- Angika
- Asuri
- Athpariya
- Awadhi
- Bagheli
- Bagri
- Bahing
- Bantawa
- Baram
- Bateri
- Belhariya
- Bhadrawahi
- Bharia
- Bhatri
Assamese/Bengali
[change | change source]Balinese script
[change | change source]- Balinese language (on occassion)
- Sasak (on occassion)
Baybayin script
[change | change source]- Ilokano (formerly)
- Kapampangan (formerly)
- Pangasinan (formerly)
- Tagalog (formerly)
- Bikol language (formerly)
- Visayan languages (formerly)
Buhid script
[change | change source]Burmese script
[change | change source]Gujarati script
[change | change source]Gurmukhi script
[change | change source]- Punjabi (also written in Shahmukhi, a variant of the Arabic script)
Hanunó'o script
[change | change source]Javanese script (Hanacaraka)
[change | change source]- Javanese (second writing system)
- Sundanese (formerly)
- Madurese (second writing system)
- Tenggerese (second writing system)
- Cirebonese (second writing system)
Kannada script
[change | change source]Khmer script
[change | change source]Lao script
[change | change source]Lepcha script
[change | change source]Limbu script
[change | change source]Lontara script (Buginese)
[change | change source]- Buginese (formerly)
- Makassarese (formerly)
- Mandar (formerly)
- Sumbawan (formerly)
- Bimanese (formerly)
- Endenese (formerly)
Malayalam script
[change | change source]Oriya script
[change | change source]'Phags-pa script
[change | change source]- Chinese (formerly)
- Mongolian (formerly)
- Sanskrit (formerly)
- Tibetan (for decorative purposes)
- Uyghur (formerly)
Sinhala script
[change | change source]Tagbanwa script
[change | change source]Tamil script
[change | change source]Telugu script
[change | change source]Thaana script
[change | change source]Thai script
[change | change source]Tibetan script
[change | change source]- Tibetan
- Dzongkha
- Ladakhi
- Zhang-Zhung (extinct)
Canadian Aboriginal script
[change | change source]Cherokee script
[change | change source]Constructed Script family in the USCR and Omniglot
[change | change source]Aiha script
[change | change source]Argpal
[change | change source]Cirth
[change | change source]Ewellic
[change | change source]- English (formerly)
Klingon
[change | change source]- Klingon (also Latin script)
Tengwar
[change | change source]Tolianem
[change | change source]Coptic alphabet
[change | change source]- Coptic language (extinct, still in use liturgically)
Cyrillic script
[change | change source]- Abkhaz
- Belarusian
- Bosnian (also Latin script and Arebica)
- Bulgarian
- Bashkir
- Chuvash
- Dungan
- Interslavic (also Latin script)
- Judaeo-Spanish (also Latin script)
- Kazakh
- Komi
- Kyrgyz
- Macedonian
- Mongolian
- Ossetic
- Russian
- Rusyn
- Serbian (also Latin script)
- Tajiki
- Tatar
- Tuvan
- Udmurt
- Ukrainian
Bosnian Cyrillic alphabet (bosančica)
[change | change source]Ge'ez script (Ethiopic)
[change | change source]Georgian script
[change | change source]- Georgian
- Laz (sometimes Latin)
- Mingrelian
- Svan
Glagolitic alphabet
[change | change source]- Old Church Slavonic (extinct, still in use liturgically)
- Croatian (formerly)
Gothic alphabet
[change | change source]- Gothic (extinct)
Greek script
[change | change source]- Bactrian (extinct)
- Greek
- Gaulish (extinct) - Written in both Greek and Latin scripts
- Judaeo-Spanish (also Latin script)
Chinese characters and derivatives
[change | change source]- Chinese
- Minority languages in China
- Dong
- Bai (obsolete)
- Miao (obsolete)
- Zhuang, with Zhuang logograms (obsolete)
- Japanese (kanji plus kana derivative)
- Korean (hanja) (obsolete; used in academic texts and newspapers)
- Vietnamese (Chữ nho and Chữ nôm) (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
[change | change source]Hebrew script
[change | change source]- Aramaic (and other writing systems)
- Bukhori
- Hebrew
- Hulaula
- Judeo-Berber
- 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
Jurchen script
[change | change source]- Jurchen (extinct)
Kaddare script
[change | change source]Kana
[change | change source]- Japanese (plus kanji)
- Ainu slightly modified kind of katakana kanas, which enable to represent final sounds which are consonants alone
- Okinawan Mostly for Hiragana and some for Katakana
Khitan scripts
[change | change source]- Khitan (extinct)
Latin script
[change | change source]- Afrikaans
- Albanian
- Aragonese
- Asturian
- Aymara
- Azeri
- Basque
- Belarusian (formerly called "Łacinka"; now uses Cyrillic)
- Bislama
- Boholano (formerly used the Baybayin)
- Bosnian ( also Cyrillic script and Arebica )
- Breton
- Catalan
- Cebuano
- Chamorro
- Cornish
- Corsican
- Croatian
- Czech
- Danish
- Dutch
- English
- Esperanto
- Estonian
- Faroese
- Fijian
- Filipino (formerly used the Baybayin)
- Finnish
- French
- Frisian
- Friulian
- Fula (Pulaar)
- Gaelic (Scottish)
- Galician
- Ganda
- German
- Gikuyu
- Guaraní
- Haitian
- Hausa (formerly used the Arabic script)
- Hawai'ian
- Hiri Motu
- Hungarian (used Old Hungarian script prior to AD 1000)
- Icelandic
- Ido
- Igbo
- Ilocano (formerly used the Baybayin)
- Indonesian
- Interlingua
- Innu-aimun
- Irish
- Italian
- Javanese - Also uses an alphabet called Hanacaraka in certain areas
- Judeo-Spanish - Also uses other scripts
- Kinyarwanda
- Kirundi
- Kongo
- Kurdish (Kurmanji)
- Latin
- Latvian
- Laz (Used by Turkey and European Lazs)
- Leonese
- Lingala
- Lithuanian
- Lombard
- Luxembourgish
- Maori
- Malagasy
- Malay
- Maltese
- Manx
- Marshallese
- Mingrelia
- Moldovan - Also Cyrillic
- Montenegrin
- Nahuatl (post Spanish Conquest)
- Nauruan
- Navaho or Navajo
- Ndebele
- Norwegian
- Occitan
- Oromo (formerly written in the Ge'ez script)
- Palauan
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Quechua
- Romanian (formerly used a Cyrillic alphabet)
- Romansh
- Samoan
- Scots
- Serbian (uses Cyrillic officially)
- Seychellois creole
- Shona
- Slovak
- Slovene
- Somali (formerly used the Arabic script and Osmanya script)
- Sotho (Northern)
- Sotho (Southern)
- Spanish
- Swahili
- Swedish
- Swati
- Tagalog (formerly used the Baybayin)
- Tahitian
- Tatar (formerly used Arabic, 1927-1938 Latin-derived Janalif, then Cyrillic and since 2000 Latin again, but generally on the internet)
- Tetum
- Tok Pisin
- Tongan
- Tsonga
- Tswana
- Turkish (formerly used the Arabic script)
- Turoyo (new Latin alphabet, originally Syriac alphabet)
- Uzbek (official script, formerly used Cyrillic)
- Venda
- Vietnamese (formerly with Chữ nho and Chữ nôm)
- Volapük
- Võro
- Walloon
- Welsh
- Wolof
- Xhosa
- Yoruba
- Zulu
- Zazaki
Mayan script
[change | change source]- Mayan languages (formerly)
Mongolian and related scripts
[change | change source]Old Uyghur alphabet
[change | change source]- Uyghur (formerly)
Mongolian script
[change | change source]Manchu script
[change | change source]Munda scripts
[change | change source]Sorang Sompeng
[change | change source]Ol Chiki
[change | change source]Warang Citi
[change | change source]N'Ko script
[change | change source]Naxi script
[change | change source]- Naxi (obsolete)
Nsibidi
[change | change source]Ogham
[change | change source]Osmanya script
[change | change source]Pahawh Hmong
[change | change source]Runic script
[change | change source]- 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 Hungarian script
[change | change source]- Hungarian (also Latin script)
Syriac script
[change | change source]- 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)