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"Serbs write their language in Cyrillic or Latin letters in seemingly random distribution. Hindi-Urdu is written in Nagari by Hindus and in the Arabic script by Muslims. In medieval Scandinavia the Latin alphabet, ink and parchment were used for texts 'for eternity', whereas ephemeral messages were carved into wood in runes. The Occitan language has two competing orthographies. German texts were set either in blackletter or in roman type between 1749 and 1941. In Ancient Egypt the distribution of hieroglyphs, hieratic and demotic was much more complex than commonly assumed. Chinese is written with traditional and simplified characters in different countries. This collective monograph, which includes contributions from eleven specialists in different philological areas, for the first time develops a coherent typological model on the basis of sociolinguistic and graphematic criteria to describe and classify these and many other linguistic situations in which two or more writing systems are used simultaneously for one and the same language."--Page [4] of cover.
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- Open Author
Alexandra von Lieven
- Open Author
Achim Rabus
- Open Author
Helma Pasch
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Daniel Buncic
- Open Author
Anastasia Antipova
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Carmen Brandt
- Open Author
Ekatarina Kislova
- Open Author
Henning Klöter
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Sandra L. Lippert
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J|rgen Spitzm|ller
- Open Author
Constanze Weth
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