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Encyclopedia > Acrophonic

Acrophony is giving a letter in an alphabet a name which begins with the letter. The best kind of acrophony is in an ideographic or pictographic writing system, where the letter's name and glyph both represent the same thing or concept.


To explain the adjective acrophonic, consider a collection of ideograms such as the Egypt. These icons have both a visual symbol and a verbal pronunciation. Many ideograms will have the same initial sound, for example, "k". Choose one representative ideogram from this subset of icons starting with k. Now, repeat this for each sound in the language, choosing one representative ideogram that starts with that sound.


These choices together form an alphabet. Such an alphabet is said to be formed acrophonically. Since the initial sound of a word is selected out to stand for the whole, and the results of this process are concatenated to form a new word, the term acrophonic is similar in derivation to acronym.


A concrete example of acrophony is in the ancient Phoenician alphabet. The first letter was originally a pictogram representing an ox, and was named after the ox, ʾāleph. The sound represented by the letter is also /a/. The Latin alphabet is descended from the Phoenician, and you can still see the stylized head of an ox if you turn the Latin letter A upside-down: ∀.


The Glagolitic and early Cyrillic alphabets, although not consisting of ideograms, also have letters named acrophonically. The letters representing /a, b, v, g, d, e/ are named Az, Buki, Vedi, Glagol, Dobro, Est. Naming the letters in order, one recites a poem, a mnemonic which helps students and scholars learn the alphabet.


Rudyard Kipling gives a fictional description of the process in one of his Just So Stories, "How the Alphabet was Made."


External link

  • How the Alphabet was Made (http://www.boop.org/jan/justso/alpha.htm) Kipling's story, online



  Results from FactBites:
 
Acrophonic numerals (107 words)
Acrophonic numeral signs use the first letter of certain numbers and currency values to stand for the whole: pi stands for πέντε, delta for δέκα, heta for ἑκατόν, and so on.
Individual signs may be combined within a single character to represent compund values: the value 50, for example, in the acrophonic system is represented by a delta (δέκα: 10) written within a pi (πέντε: 5), to indicate 5 x 10.
The Greek acrophonic numerals are now in Unicode, and EpiDoc recommend that these characters now be used and simply tagged as any other numeral or currency measure.
Ancient Scripts: Proto-Sinaitic (460 words)
A sign is a picture of an object, and the first consonant of the word for this object becomes the sound the sign represents.
In short, this is called the acrophonic principle.
For example, the word for an ox is /'aleph/, which is the first sign on the left Proto-Sinaitic column.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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