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Ancient Scripts and Phonological Knowledge

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ISBN 9789027236197 (Eur) | EUR 105.00
ISBN 9781556195709 (USA) | USD 158.00
 
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This study investigates the properties of several ancient syllabic and linear segmental scripts to make explicit the aspects of linguistic knowledge they attempt to represent. Some recent experimental work suggests that nonliterate speakers do not have segmental knowledge and that only syllabic knowledge is 'real' or accessible, whence the ubiquity of syllabaries. Miller disputes this by showing that such tests do not distinguish relevant types of knowledge, and that linguistic analysis of the ordering and writing conventions of early Western scripts corroborates the evidence from language acquisition, use, and change for segment awareness. By coding segments, the ancient syllabaries represented more phonological knowledge than the alphabet, which was a poor compromise between the vowelless West Semitic scripts and the vowel-redundant syllabic scripts.
A wide range of information about early scripts and their development is combined with a new theory of the syllable as 'Sonority Phrase'. The book's value is further enhanced by thorough discussion of the issues from a broad range of theoretical and applied viewpoints, including language play and change, cognition, literacy, and cultural history.
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 116] 1994.  xvi, 139 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 24 October 2011
Table of Contents
Cited by (13)

Cited by 13 other publications

Koller, Aaron
2024. The Evolving Definition of “Word” in Early Northwest Semitic Writing: From ‏דברים‎ to ‏תיבות‎. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 83:1  pp. 123 ff. DOI logo
Fendel, Victoria
2021. The missing piece in the jigsaw puzzle. Written Language & Literacy 24:2  pp. 198 ff. DOI logo
Corinne Ondine Pache, Casey Dué, Susan Lupack & Robert Lamberton
2020. The Cambridge Guide to Homer, DOI logo
Salomon, Corinna
2020. Raetic and Runes. NOWELE. North-Western European Language Evolution 73:1  pp. 153 ff. DOI logo
Duggirala, Vasanta
2019. Akshara Processing in Telugu Depends on Syllabic and Phonemic Sensitivity: Preliminary Evidence from Normal Hearing and Hearing-Impaired Children. In Handbook of Literacy in Akshara Orthography [Literacy Studies, 17],  pp. 119 ff. DOI logo
Valério, Miguel & Silvia Ferrara
2019. Rebus and acrophony in invented writing. Writing Systems Research 11:1  pp. 66 ff. DOI logo
David, Jacques
2015. Literacy -Litéracie-littératie : évolution et destinée d'un concept. Le français aujourd'hui N° 190:3  pp. 9 ff. DOI logo
Majewski, Paweł
2013. Pismo, tekst, literatura. Praktyki piśmienne starożytnych Greków i matryca pamięci kulturowej Europejczyków, DOI logo
Hawkins, Shane
2012. A Linguistic Analysis of the Vase Inscriptions of Sophilos. Glotta 88:1-4  pp. 122 ff. DOI logo
Hawkins, Shane
2012. A Linguistic Analysis of the Vase Inscriptions of Sophilos. Glotta 88:1-4  pp. 122 ff. DOI logo
Schulte, Michael
2008. Review of Stoklund, Nielsen, Holmberg & Fellows-Jensen (2006): Runes and their Secrets. Studies in Runology. NOWELE. North-Western European Language Evolution 53  pp. 83 ff. DOI logo
Schulte, Michael
Vasanta, Duggirala
2004. Processing phonological information in a semi-syllabic script: Developmental data from Telugu. Reading and Writing 17:1-2  pp. 59 ff. DOI logo

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U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  94028635 | Marc record
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