Terminology, mark 2
From the preceding discussion, it seems clear that my
original post was less clear than it should be. Let me try to present my terminology again, in a more systematic way.
The basic unit of a writing system is the
grapheme. In different writing systems, graphemes can denote phonemes, syllables or words. Note that graphemes are abstract units, like phonemes: they are realised in written form as one or more
allographs.
Many writing systems assemble graphemes into distinct graphical units, which for want of a standard term I have been calling
blocks. Very often each block writes a single syllable, in which case I call them
syllable blocks. Not all scripts have blocks as a distinct unit: they are missing in scripts such as Latin, Tifinagh and Meroitic. (And it is a moot point whether syllabaries should be considered as having one-grapheme-long syllable blocks or not.)
The next level of the hierarchy is the
line of text. (Admittedly I use this word wiith some trepidation here, since text can also be written in spirals, circles, etc.) This is formed by arranging blocks next to each other in sequence, or individual graphemes for those scripts which lack blocks. Invariably, they are arranged linearly, in the same order as spoken, in a specific chosen direction: usually left-to-right, right-to-left, or top-to-bottom.
Finally, at the highest level we have the whole
text, formed by arranging lines in sequence, generally arranged perpendicularly to their long axis. In some ancient texts, every second line is flipped (i.e. written
boustrophedon). Other texts can have additional levels above this, e.g. by arranging groups of lines into columns.
All that being said… having written this, I think I see why masako got confused earlier:
my concept of ‘linearity’ conflated different levels of the hierarchy. Specifically, I was calling a script ‘linear’ if its blocks were written in the same direction as its lines,
or if it had no blocks at all.
And of course, this was confused for precisely the reasons people have been telling me. Lines of text are
always linear — no matter whether their components are graphemes or blocks of graphemes. (And it’s pretty clear that we process them in one direction, too, which is presumably where all the ‘psychology’ stuff came from.) Meanwhile, blocks are tightly-bound units, for which the relative positioning of their constituent graphemes is fixed, and has nothing much to do with linearity at the next level up (that being the lines they comprise).
What makes this all even more confusing is that sloppy writers have previously been happy to mix up these separate concepts. To take but one example, the only reason why anyone would consider 'Phagspa to be at all similar to an alphabet is if the positioning of graphemes in syllable blocks (top-to-bottom) is conflated with the direction of writing in lines (also top-to-bottom).
But still, I think we can define different levels of ‘block-ness’, depending on the graphical salience of the block relative to the surrounding text. If a block is written in line with the surrounding text, that naturally decreases its salience. This is the case with 'Phagspa, Pollard and Pahawh Hmong — and interestingly, all three add spaces around their blocks to make them more distinct (plus a connecting bar in 'Phagspa). For that matter, Vietnamese does the same for Latin, creating syllable blocks in a script which usually doesn’t have them. But in all of these cases, the blocks are still less immediately obvious than those of, for instance, Thaana, Hangeul and Ge'ez.
(Hmm… if I‘m saying that Vietnamese has syllable blocks, does that also mean that English has ‘word blocks’? I dislike this analysis — largely because English words have no rigidly fixed internal structure or relative positioning, so they behave quite differently to the blocks I’ve identified in other scripts. But it’s an interesting thought!)
In this light, let me revisit the properties of typical alphabets from my last post:
bradrn wrote: ↑Tue Dec 26, 2023 5:34 am
- Graphemes are arranged in a single line in one direction
- Consonants and vowels are graphically equal
- Each phoneme corresponds to one grapheme
It is simpler and more revealing to merge both (1) and (2) together, by saying that
alphabets tend not to have blocks. Alphabets which defy this have often left writers confused, as with Pollard, Lao and Thaana.
Similarly, we can say that
abugidas tend to have blocks — and indeed people have also been confused by ones which don’t, as with Meroitic.
But I dislike thinking of blocks as part of the definition: rather, I define ‘alphabets’ and ‘abugidas’ by which unit of language their graphemes represent. Whether they have syllable blocks or not is then an entirely orthogonal property.