Non Latin

Non Latin




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Non Latin
Non Latin Script Languages Of The World
The ancient Phoenician language, spoken in north Africa and the eastern Mediterranean coastal regions from around the third century to the tenth century, is the common ancestor of today's modern alphabets.
There are eight alphabet groups in use today - Arabic, Aramaic, Armenian, Brahmi, Cyrillic, Georgian, Greek and Latin (The one that you are reading this page in).
The Chinese group of languages do not use alphabets. An alphabet must have consonants and vowels in order to make up words, where as Chinese script consists of logosyllabic characters known as glyphs to denote different sounds, words and even phrases.
Shown on the graph below is how the ancient Phoenician alphabet evolved into the world's alphabets we know today.
4) Aramaic / Hebrew / Brahmi / Indic .
Shown below are twenty two computer keyboards which show the world's non Latin script alphabets. The following scripts are taken from examples 2, 3, 4 or 5 from the above graph and from the alphasyllabic or Chinese logosyllabic / glyph characters.
Modern Standard Arabic is written horizontally from right to left and uses twenty eight unicameral letters, that is letters that have no definition between upper and lower case, which is known as Haskh script.
Arabic is spoken by around 175 million people in North Africa and the Middle East and is the liturgical language of Islam and one of the six official languages of the United Nations.
Armenian is a language spoken by round 6.7 million people as the official language of Armenia and as a minority language in seven other countries.
Armenian has it's own alphabet and script which originates from the ancient Pahlavi language, whose alphabet originated from Aramaic and it's spoken form from the Middle Iranian group of languages.
The Armenian alphabet consists of thirty six letters which are written horizontally from left to right.
Standard Chinese or Mandarin does not have an alphabet but uses logosyllabic characters called glyphs. There are thousands of these glyphs in Standard Mandarin, which are written to fit into a square and placed in vertical columns from top to bottom.
Mandarin is spoken by around 845 million people in the north and south west of China, making it the most widely spoken language in the world.
Mandarin is also one of the six official languages of the United Nations.
There are also a number of regional dialects spoken in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau. The most widely spoken after Mandarin are Cantonese, Min and Wu.
Farsi is the official language of Iran and is derived from the ancient Persian language. Persian is a pluricentric language, that is a language which has several written and spoken forms.
Farsi uses the Arabic script in it's written form, a cursive alphabet with thirty two letters which are written from right to left and known as the Perso - Arabic alphabet.
Farsi is spoken by around sixty million people in Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikstan.
The Georgian alphabet developed from the Asomtarruli alphabet during the fifth century. It's alphabet has thirty three unicameral letters, that is letters that have no definition between upper and lower case, which are written from left to right.
The Georgian language is a Kartavellian language which originated in the South Caucus region.
The language is spoken by around 7 million people and is the official language of Georgia.
The Greek language was adapted from the ancient Phonecian alphabet and is one of the oldest forms of alphabet in existence, with over thirty four centuries of written records.
The Greek alphabet consists of twenty four upper and lower case letters and the language is spoken by around 13 million people in Greece and the Balkan States of the Aegean.
The Standard Hebrew alphabet was developed from the ancient Aramaic script around three thousand years ago. The alphabet consists of twenty two unicameral letters, that is letters that have no definition between upper and lower case, which are written from right to left.
Hebrew is spoken by around 8 million people and is one of two official languages spoken in Israel and the liturgical language of the Judaism religion.
Modern standard Hindi uses Devangari script which was developed from the ancient Sanskrit script during the fourth century, although the modern form of the alphabet has only been used since around the 15th century.
Devangari script is syllabic and uses around one hundred basic letter forms which are written from left to right.
Hindi is one of the official languages of India and is spoken by around 487 million people.
The Japanese language does not use an alphabet, but is instead made up of three scripts of Chinese origin, Hanji, Hiragana and Katakana .
The written form of Japanese is syllabic and developed in the 8th century.
Japanese is spoken by around 127 million people and is the official language of Japan.
The Kazakh language is a Turkic language spoken by around eleven million people around the world, mainly in Kazakhstan. The language's alphabet, which uses forms from the Latin, Arabic and Cyrillic alphabets, uses twenty nine letters one digit which are written from right to left.
Khmer is the official language of Cambodia and is spoken by around fifteen million people.The Khmer alphabet was formed from an alphasyllabary - Abugida script, a script which combines both letters from an alphabet and syllabic characters, during the 6th century.
Khmer script has Brahmic origins and contains thirty three consonants, all with inherent vowels, which is written from left to right.
The Korean language is written in Hangul script, which originates from the Chinese Hanja script.
The alphabet consists of twenty four letters which are written horizontally from left to right.
Korean is spoken by around 63 million people and is the official language of both North and South Korea.
The Mongolian language uses the Uyghur script in it's written form, which is a cursive alphabet of syllabic structure, which is written from left to right in vertical columns, from top to bottom, the only vertically written language in the world to do so.
Uyghur script evolved from the classic Mongol language during the thirteenth century when it was based on Chinese characters, although modern Mongolian now uses the Cyrillic alphabet.
Mongolian is spoken by around six million people in central Asia and is the official language of Mongolia.
Myanma, more commonly known as Burmese, is a Brahmic language which uses the Abugida Script in it's written form. The script consists of thirty three letters and four digits which are written from left to right.
Myanma / Burmese is spoken by around thirty three million people as a first language in Myanmar / Burma and by another ten million people as a second language.
The Nepalese language is written in Devengari script, which originates from the ancient Sanskrit script.
The Devengari script uses around one hundred basic letter forms which are all syllabic and written from left to right.
Nepali is spoken by around thirteen million people in Bhutan, Myanmar and India and is the official language of Nepal.
Pashtu is the main language spoken in Afghanistan.The language in it's written form uses the Naskh script derived from Arabic.
The language has forty five letters and is written horizontally from right to left.
Pashtu is spoken by around sixty million people in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The written form of Russian uses the Cyrillic alphabet, an alphabet originally formed from classical Greek .
The Cyrillic alphabet has forty eight letters which are written horizontally from left to right, which has both upper and lower case letters.
Russian is spoken by around one hundred and forty four million people and Cyrillic script is used in eight Slavic languages and eleven non Slavic languages.
Russian is the official language of Russia and one of the six official languages of the UN.
Sanskrit is the forerunner of most written forms of Indian languages and is derived from the fourth century Brahmi or Indic scripts.
Sanskrit uses a modern day Devengari script which is used as the liturgical language of the Hinduism religion and the scholarly language of Jainism and Buddhism.
At two thousand years old Tamil is the world's longest surviving, classical language which still remains in it's authentic and original form.
Tamil is a language of the Dravidian language group which uses the Brahmi script in it's written form.
Tamil script consists of thirty letters which are written horizontally from left to right.
Tamil is spoken by around 85 million people as the national language of Sri Lanka, one of the official languages of Singapore and as a minority language in India and Malaysia.
The Tibetan language is written in an alphasyllabic - Abugida script which originates from the ancient Indic script.
The alphabet consists of thirty five letters which are written from left to right.
Standard Tibetan is spoken by around five million people in Tibet, Nepal and China.
The Thai alphabet uses an alphasyllabic - Abugida writing system which is derived from Brahmic script.
The language consists of fifty nine letters which are written from left to right, as well as nine glyphs which are used for numerals.
Thai is spoken by about sixty million people in south, east Asia and is the official language of Thailand.
Ukrainian is an East Slavic language which uses a variant of the Cyrillic alphabet in it's written form.
The language consists of thirty three letters and uses both upper and lower case letters.
There are around 45 million speakers of Ukrainian, which is the official state language of The Ukraine and a minority language in eight other countries.
Urdu has only been around since the middle of the 14th century and took around a thousand years to evolve from a mixture of Persian, Arabic, Bengali,Turkic and English.
Urdu in it's written form uses the Nasta'liq script, which is based on the ancient Indic script.
Nasta'liq script uses thirty eight letters which are written horizontally from right to left.
Urdu is spoken by around 70 million people throughout the Islamic states of India and Bangladesh and is the national language of Pakistan.
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Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: nón , nőn , non- , and Non.
Non poemos analizar con pormenoris estis siglos, pero tampoco se debi toleral que, sin fundamentus, se poña en duda algo que a Historia documentá nos lega sobre nossa terra. We ca n’t thoroughly analyse these centuries, but one mustn’t tolerate that, unfoundedly, something documented history tells us about our land be questioned.
Êtes-vous toujours en prière ? Êtes-vous des astres blessés ? Car ce sont des pleurs de lumière, Non des rayons, que vous versez. Are you still in prayer? Are you hurt stars? Because it is cries of light, Not rays, that you pour.
debbo reeduujo hino hanndi e ñaametee yottiiɗo fii yo tere makko ɗen gollu no haaniri non . A pregnant woman requires a substantial diet for her body to function properly
Min non mi yiɗaa ɗun! As for me, I especially dislike that
Ás veces é mellor berrar que non calar Sometimes it is better to shout than to - keep quiet
‏ ביינאבﬞינטוראדﬞו איל בﬞארון קי נון אנדה אין קונסיזﬞו די מאלוס. ‎‎ Bienaventurado el varon que non anda en consejo de malos. Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked.
Lingua Graeca est; potest nōn legī. It's Greek; it can not be read.
not to stir from one's place: loco or vestigio se non movere to lose no time: tempus non amittere, perdere to take no thought for the future: futura non cogitare, curare I have not seen you for five years: quinque anni sunt or sextus annus est, cum te non vidi on the day after, which was September 5th: postridie qui fuit dies Non. Sept. (Nonarum Septembrium) (Att. 4. 1. 5) to-day the 5th of September; tomorrow September the 5th: hodie qui est dies Non. Sept.; cras qui dies futurus est Non. Sept. to be always at a person's side: ab alicuius latere non discedere to make not the slightest effort; not to stir a finger: manum non vertere alicuius rei causa to have disappeared: non apparere to fail to see what lies before one: quod ante pedes est or positum est, non videre to keep one's countenance, remain impassive: vultum non mutare to be hardly able to restrain one's tears: lacrimas tenere non posse to be hardly able to restrain one's tears: fletum cohibere non posse to be unable to speak for emotion: prae lacrimis loqui non posse to be unable to sleep: somnum capere non posse I cannot sleep for anxiety: curae somnum mihi adimunt, dormire me non sinunt I haven't had a wink of sleep: somnum oculis meis non vidi (Fam. 7. 30) the matter progresses favourably, succeeds: aliquid (bene, prospere) succedit or procedit (opp. parum procedere, non succedere ) on good grounds; reasonably: non sine causa to draw from the fountain-head: e fontibus haurire (opp. rivulos consectari or fontes non videre ) it is incompatible with the nature of a wise man; the wise are superior to such things: hoc in sapientem non cadit it is no longer in my power: mihi non est integrum, ut... to accede to a man's petitions: alicui petenti satisfacere, non deesse to chafe under an indignity, repudiate it: ignominiam non ferre to spare no pains: labori, operae non parcere to work without intermission: laborem non intermittere ideally, not really: cogitatione, non re to be probable: a vero non abhorrere I know very well: probe scio, non ignoro I know very well: non sum ignarus, nescius (not non sum inscius ) I am not unaware: me non fugit, praeterit I cannot make myself believe that..: non possum adduci, ut (credam) I have not made up my mind: mihi non constat (with indirect question) I cannot bring myself to..: a me impetrare non possum, ut to differ qualitatively not quantitatively: genere, non numero or magnitudine differre I have nothing to say against it: non repugno to contradict oneself, be inconsistent: a se dissidere or sibi non constare (of persons) to be absolutely ignorant of arithmetic: bis bina quot sint non didicisse to represent a thing dramatically: sic exponere aliquid, quasi agatur res (non quasi narretur) to be unable to say all one wants: verbis non omnia exsequi posse I have nothing to write about: non habeo argumentum scribendi I have nothing to write about: non habeo, non est quod scribam to answer every question: percontanti non deesse (De Or. 1. 21. 97) not to trouble oneself about a thing: non laborare de aliqua re I am not dissatisfied with my progress: non me paenitet, quantum profecerim to lose one's head, be beside oneself: sui (mentis) compotem non esse to lose one's head, be beside oneself: non esse apud se (Plaut. Mil. 4. 8. 26) the house is not large enough for all: domus non omnes capit (χωρειν) to never set foot out of doors: domo pedem non efferre I have no means, no livelihood: non habeo, qui (unde) vivam to be bankrupt: non solvendo esse (Phil. 2. 2. 4) the corn is not yet ripe: frumenta in agris matura non sunt (B. G. 1. 16. 2) to further the common weal: saluti rei publicae non deesse there are whispers of the appointment of a dictator: non nullus odor est dictaturae (Att. 4. 18) to take care not to..: non committere, ut... men exempt from service owing to age: qui per aetatem arma ferre non possunt or aetate ad bellum inutiles to fail to answer one's name: ad nomen non respondere (Liv. 7. 4) not to interrupt the march: iter non intermittere to not let the enemy escape: hostem e manibus non dimittere not to mention..: ut non (nihil) dicam de... to say nothing further on..: ut plura non dicam I do not deny: non nego, non infitior I cannot find words for..: dici vix (non) potest or vix potest dici ( vix like non always before potest ) which I can say without offence, arrogance: quod non arroganter dixerim this is not the place to..: non est huius loci c. Inf. this is not the place to..: non est hic locus, ut... I do not take that too strictly: non id ad vivum reseco (Lael. 5. 8)

^ Douglas Harper (2001–2022), “ non- ”, in Online Etymology Dictionary .


Les uns barbez, les autres non Some bearded, the others not
From Middle Dutch nonne , which ultimately derives from Late Latin nonna .

non f ( plural nonnen , diminutive nonnetje n )

From Old Portuguese non , from Latin nōn ( “ not ” ) .

From Old Galician and Old Portuguese non , from Latin nōn .

Non usually contracts in speech with a following definite article or personal pronoun ( a , as , o , os ). The result of this contraction, in the past written as nono , no-no , n'o , among other forms, is [nona], [nono], [nonas], [nono] in the east and central areas and [na], [no], [nas], [nos] in the west. Today these contractions are rarely shown in written Galician:

From French non ( “ no, not ” ) .

Ultimately derives from Late Latin nonna .

non ( first-person possessive non ku , second-person possessive non mu , third-person possessive non nya )

non ( first-person possessive non ku , second-person possessive non mu , third-person possessive non nya )

From Old Latin noenum , from Proto-Indo-European *ne ( “ not ” ) + *óynos ( “ one ” ) . Equivalent to ne + ūnus [1] . See also nē and nī .

The particle nōn may be used to negate verbs, adjectives, nouns, or phrases.

From Old Norse nón , from Latin nona (hora) ( “ ninth hour ” ) . Akin to English noon and nones .

non n ( definite singular nonet , indefinite plural non , definite plural nona )

non m ( oblique plural nons , nominative singular nons , nominative plural non )

From Latin nōn ( “ no ” ) , from Old Latin noenum , from Proto-Indo-European *ne ( “ not ” ) + *óynos ( “ one ” ) .

Dialectal variant of Sicilian nun , from Latin nōn . Maybe influenced from Italian non .

From Proto-Vietic *k-nɔːn , from * k-rn-ɔːn , which Ferlus considered an infixed derivation of Proto-Vietic *kɔːn ( “ child ” ) . Cognate with Chut [Rục] kunɔːn¹ , Semai kenon ( “ child ” ) , Juang kɔnɔn ("child, son, the young one; young"), Khmu [Cuang] krnɔːn ("uterus"). Likely received some semantic influence from 嫩 ( MC nuən H ) (SV: nộn ) as well.

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium .)

Cognates: Navajo nooʼ , Chiricahua nun , Mescalero nun , Plains Apache nǫǫ .




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