
[Home Page]
[Language Page]
[Writing Page]
[Evolution of the Latin Alphabet]
[Evolution of Writing Systems]
[Amharic]
[Arabic]
[Aramaic]
[Armenian]
[Bengali]
[Berber]
[Brahmi]
[Burmese]
[Cham]
[Chinese Characters]
[Chinese Pictograms]
[Coptic]
[Cuniform]
[Cyrillic]
[Etruscan]
[Georgian]
[Greek]
[Gujarati]
[Hebrew]
[Hindi]
[Japanese]
[Javanese]
[Kannada]
[Khmer]
[Korean]
[Lao]
[Latin (Roman and Modern)]
[Lepcha]
[Linear B]
[Malayalam]
[Maldivian]
[Mayan]
[Mongolian]
[Nastaliq]
[Oriya]
[Phoenician]
[Punjabi]
[Runic]
[Samaritan]
[Sanskrit]
[Sinhalese]
[Syriac]
[Tamil]
[Telugu]
[Thai]
[Tibetan]
[Tocharian]
[Ugarit]
[Readers' Feedback (Languages)]
Script samples from OmniGlot
|
The Syriac Alphabet
Syriac (also called Nestorian) writing is used by the language of the same name spoken in
Ancient Syria.
The language is still used by Syrian Orthodox Christians.
The script is related to Arabic.
|
|