Hirgunya

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Hirgunya is the common name for the ancient writing system used in late Kalaman Civilization that is the source of many modern writing systems. Hirgunya is an abugida. It is written from left to right. Hirgunya is the parent writing system for several other writing systems, including the Early Ithatian Syllabary, the Midretassene Alphabet, and the Erechórebese Alphabet. A late form of the Classical Hirgunya Abugida Script is still used today to write Kushiri and Jaithan.

नमूना पाठ

Hirgunya Script

The Hirgunya Abugida represents syllabic utterances. Special forms indicate the final character of a word. A syllable in Hirgunya can potentially consist of the following components in the following order:

Prefictive S + Connecting Consonant + Stem + vowel or mute + diacritics (if any) + closure

Most syllables in the Kushiri and Jaithan languages do not have all these components, but it is possible. In the word 'sklancha,' the first syllable 'sklan' has all five components, a prefictive s, a connecting consonant 'k,' a stem (liquid) 'l,' a diacritic (short, accented), and a closure 'N.' The 'cha' part of the word is the second and last syllable of the word 'sklancha.'

The Hirgunya Script also has a character for the foreign sound 'll,' a voiceless lateral fricative which does not occur in Jathya-Dhumi languages. It was used to represent this foreign sound found in the Neptultchi Language and the Colnorian Language.

Hirgunya Script Renderings

See Also