Wikipedia talk:Naming conventions (writing systems)

Latest comment: 11 months ago by .Raven in topic Help with POV-warring

Naming consistency edit

archived from Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Writing systems

section renamed

A bunch of scripts were changed from X script to X alphabet, for consistency with a few scripts, like Devanagari, Hebrew, Arabic, etc.

I think we should revert all of these (except maybe Proto-Canaanite and Ugaritic), but would like some sort of consensus. VIWS talk 23:47, 30 July 2011 (UTC)Reply

I'm fine with moving them all back to 'script', but if we do that, we need to move Hebrew alphabet, Arabic alphabet, Devanagari alphabet, etc. as well, which may take some doing. I don't much care which word we use, as long as we treat minor/regional scripts equally with the major (from an English POV) scripts. It's unjust to say that Hebrew but not Aramaic, or Nagari but not Bengali, is an "alphabet". — kwami (talk) 00:03, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
I think that we should consistently name abugidas, syllabaries, "ideographies", and undeciphered systems as "scripts" or even "writing" when appropriate for undeciphered, pasigraphic, asemic, etc., with the Semitic and European scripts to "alphabet", as well as any other scripts that segment C/V/C or Cv/Cv, but not CV/CV or CV(C)/CV(C). In other words, an "alphabet" is a "script" with segmentable consonants and either segmentable vowels, or understood, but not inherent vowels. What do we think? VIWS talk 00:21, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
As we had it before my moves, "script" has two meaning in our titles: style (cursive, clear, square, grass, block, italic script) and funny squiggles made by obscure peoples. With one or two exceptions I hesitated over, it currently AFAIK only has the former meaning.
I'm not sure what your "Cv/Cv" notation means: I would interpret it to mean abugida, but you specifically exclude abugidas. Why? They're just as much alphabets as abjads are, if not more so, since they're fully segmental while abjads are not.
I was using the "/" to indicate the verbal element corresponding to a writing segment, so a small "v" would be an understood vowel, opposed to an inherent or explicit vowel. Maybe Cv/Cv is better. I just think there is a distinct divide between the alphabetic/abjadi tradition and the Indic 1abugida tradition that should be respected, even if you assume the Brahmi-from-Aramaic hypothesis. I personally would not name caligraphic styles "X script" - I think "Fraktur", "Carolignian miniscule", and "Nastaliq" are precise enough terms for those writing styles, for example. VIWS talk 01:29, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
They also fit the definition you just gave for "alphabet" better than adjads do. It would also lead to some oddities: Kashmiri, for example, is written in the Arabic alphabet script, yet we wouldn't be able to call it an "alphabet" because the vowels are written, making it an abugida. So, if we add vowel diacritics to a consonantal alphabet, the result is no longer an alphabet! — kwami (talk) 00:54, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
That would make it alphabetic, rather than abjadi. I think Arabic should proably be named "Arabic alphabet", but I disagree that the Bangla script should be "Bengali alphabet". I think they are of different quality. Now, I'm sure that you can find an odd example of one type of system being used in another way, but that doesn't change the general nature of the use of that script.

I'm mostly concerned about the slippery slope of "katakana alphabet" and the like, but I believe abugidas are of a different quality than abjadi/alphabetic writing systems. VIWS talk

What slippery slope? Katakana is a syllabary. It isn't segmental at all, apart from a couple oddities (soku-on, etc.), so it has no relevance here.
Fraktur, sure. But we can't rename the clear script "clear".
So, Brahmic abugidas are not alphabets, because they're distinct from the Semitic tradition? Would Ethiopic abugidas then be alphabets, because they are in the Semitic tradition?
I see the dividing line between alphabets/abugidas, which are fully segmental scripts, and abjads, which are defective segmental scripts. (Using 'defective' as a technical term.) Saying an abugida is not an alphabet is like saying Vietnamese is not an alphabet because it marks tone with diacritics rather than with letters the way Hmong does.
"That would make it alphabetic, rather than abjadi". No, that would make it neither. If you write consonants with letters, and mark vowels with diacritics, you have an abugida. Kashmiri is an Arabic-based abugida, just as Brahmi may have been an Aramaic-based abugida, or Amharic is a Ge'ez-based abugida, and by your convention not an alphabet.
If you're only worried about kana, that's a non-issue. No-one claims they're alphabets unless by "alphabet" they simply mean writing. There's no connection to abugidas. But I don't see why we should start making arbitrary choices about which segmental scripts qualify as alphabets: either only full/true alphabets do, in which case we move Arabic and Hebrew to 'script', or they all do, in which case Bengali and Thai stay at 'alphabet'. Anything else strikes me as a personal take on what's close enough to normal to be called 'normal'. — kwami (talk) 02:03, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
No. I'm saying that "alphabet" is only consistent with alphabetic and abjadi scripts. That's it. I don't believe abugidas are appropriate to call an alphabet. Script is neutral, if less than elucidating. Like I said, I want to get consensus on this issue, but I'd prefer not to have my proposal - which is insanely clear - not to be misconstrued: and I quote myself: "I think that we should consistently name abugidas, syllabaries, "ideographies", and undeciphered systems as "scripts" or even "writing" when appropriate for undeciphered, pasigraphic, asemic, etc., with the Semitic and European scripts to "alphabet"." Period. If a caligraphic or print style is consistently refered to in plain English as "script", I don't think that should call into question every other item that we call a script as well. On the one hand, we have consistency, on the other exclusivity. I argue only for consistency. I think that refering to syllabaries as "scripts", but abugidas as "alphabets" doesn't make sense. I think the dividing line is syllabic segmentation. VIWS talk 03:42, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
"Syllabic segmentation". Abugidas are not "syllabic". They are segmental scripts. (A segment is a consonant or a vowel; the only syllabic segments are vowels, syllabic nasals, and the like.) If it is not acceptable to call them alphabets because they don't treat vowels as separate letters, then it is not acceptable to call Hebrew and Arabic alphabets either. If we can agree to move all abjad articles to 'script', then I have no problem moving the abugidas as well. I also only argue for consistency: either all segmental scripts are "alphabets", or only "true" alphabets are "alphabets", but not Western scrips are "alphabets" and Eastern scripts are not.
BTW, what about Wadaad's writing? Is that actually its name? — kwami (talk) 05:27, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
In answer to the last (Wadaad's writing): Yes. See the RS now quoted as footnote 1. – Raven  .talk 00:35, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

Wow! Serious bad faith in moving more articles while this is being discussed. I'm extremely disappointed. VIWS talk 07:15, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply

I have, unfortunately, been forced to request administrative assistance in preventing more moves until a consensus can be reached. I ask for the opinions of everyone, so that we can get as many opinions as possible. VIWS talk 07:46, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply

Nearly all of those were move you agree to. The few (4?) that weren't are merely consistent with the rest.
You haven't been "forced" to do anything. And which "more moves" would that prevent? AFAIK the articles are now consistent. — kwami (talk) 07:59, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
Quite frankly, I don't know what other moves you would make. That's the problem. You moved 20 more articles without discussing it. Nobody has any idea what the heck you are going to do next, least of all me. If we can't rely on good faith, we have to rely on people with power, which means requesting admins to step in. I'm sorry you can't understand that moving all those articles without discussing it was an incredible breach. I'm sorry I can no longer trust you to act in good faith. VIWS talk 08:14, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
In general, a script is language-neutral and a writing system is language-dependent, where an alphabet is part of a writing system, but not every writing system employs an alphabet. That’s sometimes non-obvious to decide, because many scripts are used (almost) exclusively with one writing system (and language).
Some linguists, e.g. influential Daniels/Bright 1996, use script and writing system as synonyms and then need the term adaptation when a script is used outside its original writing system.
To qualify as an alphabet, a signary must be a fixed set (of letters) and it needs a conventional collation order. Some use alphabet as a hyperonym, some as a cohyponym or antonym to abjad. (Others don’t use the terms abjad andabugida at all.) — Christoph Päper 10:13, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
So do you have any sort of opinion on a naming convention for Wikipedia writing system articles? VIWS talk
I only have experience with languages that use alphabets; but I have been concerned for a while with the double usage of the word alphabet.
E.g. the English language uses a Latin alphabet that is not the same as the Latin alphabet; and the phrase the Latin alphabet itself means (a) "the set of letters used to write the Latin language" or (b) "the union of the sets of letters used to write all languages which use an alphabet derived from the Latin alphabet in sense (a)".
The situation is not as confusing with the Cyrillic alphabet. It is a collection of letters, not all of which are used in the writing system of any one language, and there is no Cyrillic language. So, the set of letters used to write the Russian language is the Russian alphabet, and that is a subset of the Cyrillic alphabet.
Would it make sense to call the set of letters used in the writing system of a particular language an alphabet and the larger collections of letters a script? That way the Russian and Ukranian alphabets would be subsets of the Cyrillic script, and likewise the English, German and Latin alphabets would be subsets of the Latin script. (I think this distinction is line with what Christoph Päper said above.)
Yes, that’s more or less what I tried to say, see also another section. By the way, some linguists, e.g. Coulmas, use roman for the script and Latin for the alphabet. — Christoph Päper 18:47, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
Roman script can also mean Roman typeface, but maybe that wouldn't be a problem. — kwami (talk) 21:07, 2 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
A set of letters used only in the writing system of a single language would be both and alphabet and a script. If another language later used an adaptation of this alphabet, then there would be two alphabets and an enlarged script.
I don't have anything to say about those writing systems which are not alphabets. —Coroboy (talk) 11:33, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
That's an interesting idea, naming all writing systems "script", and saving "alphabet" for national alphabets. I kinda like it. How would you deal with situations, like "Arabic alphabet/script", where the two are less easily distinguishable than, say, Latin? VIWS talk
I rather like it too. It fixes a gap that's been bothering me for a while. I wonder how well we'd be able to defend it, but with good refs it should be okay.
So we'd have the Persian and Arabic alphabets of the Arabic script. Or the Persian and Arabic abjads of the Arabic script, if we prefer. Of course, with historical adjads and modern Brahmic, it may be tricky trying to decide when things are distinct enough to count as separate scripts. — kwami (talk) 12:05, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
Ease of navigation.
What is the purpose of having X [where X is alphabet/script/abugida/etc] after a language? To distinguish the writing system(s) from, in most cases, the related language(s) itself(themselves), yes? If I was typing in a search on Wikipedia (or indeed Google) for Turkmen writing system (not knowing whether Turkmen is written in Cyrillic or Arabic or Roman since independence, or historically) I'd be much more likely to search for "Turkmen script" as a neutral default rather than Turkmen alphabet (I expect all three of those to turn up as redlinks since it's unlikely that Turkmen has it's own script, but I'd still search first for "script") I can sort of see the distinction of saying "Danish alphabet" when someone is making a distinction of the extra marks in many alphabets, but wouldn't Danish script be just as good? The real pain is if the user has to guess whether a given language is on Wikipedia as an alphabet or a script. In ictu oculi (talk) 05:19, 1 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
I agree that not all readers would know beforehand whether a language uses an alphabet/abjad/abugida etc.; but the title of an article should still be precise. A search for Turkmen script should be redirected to the article Turkmen alphabet. —Coroboy (talk) 07:14, 1 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
I think redirects are an inevitability, no matter what is decided. The question is how to standardize the nomenclature so that someone who visits a writing system article will likely be able to guess the name of the next article. If you were to visit "Gurmukhi script", and you wanted to compare with something in Tifinagh, will the name of the current article guide the visitor to the right choice? Or will they end up at an article about the Tifinagh language (is there one? I know that Tuareg uses the Tifinagh script.) instead of the Tifinagh writing system? Or will they end up at a page for a people? In other words, are people going to be helped or hindered by the naming conventions? That's the question.VIWS talk
A one-word answer to your (parenthesized) question would be Tamazight — but that resolves to "the Berber languages". – Raven  .talk 10:57, 5 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Unfortunately, that method ("naming all writing systems 'script', and saving 'alphabet' for national alphabets") fails to properly allocate single unvarying alphabets used across either national borders (Esperanto alphabet) or multiple languages (ISO basic Latin alphabet, International Phonetic Alphabet, Theban alphabet). These are not scripts which have multiple alphabets as subsets, nor does the sequence of their letter-sets vary by where or by whom they are used. You could describe the last two (IPA and Theban) as being both alphabets (fixed letter-sets) and scripts (in the sense of having letterforms distinctly different from others), but then in a sense all alphabets – along with all abugidas, syllabaries, and ideographic or logographic character-sets – are also scripts, a subset/superset relationship. (Which is why their infoboxes have "Script type" specified.) So if being a "script" makes that the title, every article on all of them will be titled "script" rather than the specific type. Clearly that's less helpful to the reader than the more specific type. Leave "script" in the title for letterforms that have multiple subset alphabets, like Cyrillic and Arabic (i.e. for more than the Russian-language and Arabic-language versions). Leave "alphabet" in the title for single unvarying letter-sets, even if shared across boundaries of nation or language. Note that, off-WP, Merriam-Webster defines "alphabet", primary meaning (1a): "a set of letters or other characters with which one or more languages are written especially if arranged in a customary order" – Raven  .talk 01:08, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Kwami has gone ahead and made this change via several edits on 16 March 2011, (e.g. here), despite disagreement from Coroboy ("... the title of an article should still be precise. A search for Turkmen script should be redirected to the article Turkmen alphabet.") and no comments in support (Vanisaac's comment doesn't seem to either support or oppose.) This change was made without consensus, which is sufficient reason to revert. – Raven  .talk 01:19, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
... And kwami, no-one else, has now reverted the reversion (plus edit to match expressed consensus) of his non-consensus edit. This is the typical beginning of an edit war – this after his earlier move-warring of Theban alphabetTheban script, a violation of WP:RMUM – Move wars are disruptive, so if you make a bold move and it is reverted, do not make the move again. Instead, follow the procedures laid out in § Requesting controversial and potentially controversial moves. Clearly, following policy is optional to kwami. I decline to engage in such anti-WP behavior by re-re-reverting. But a "rule" so imposed (and then thumped as it has been at Talk:Theban script) is without moral force. – Raven  .talk 03:18, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

Tree example edit

I came here because I found an abugida moved to a name "X alphabet" [1], and always thought the two to be distinct. Extending Coroboy's proposal, I would like to add a tree:

An alphabet for me has the connotation of being an ordered set of characters, but that may be wrong. Script does not. I don't no about abugida etc.

Yes. For example, the German and Finnish alphabets both contain the letters ‹ä› and ‹ö›, but the alphabet ordering is quite different. Both of these alphabets use a selection from the "Latin script". —Coroboy (talk) 07:14, 1 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

I strongly suggest to use the term alphabet not for things that are not "true" alphabets. If an abugida is not an alphabet then it is confusing to call an abugida article "Xyz alphabet". Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 13:32, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply

Terminology varies; abugida and abjad are not at all consensual terms, but at least they are quite unambiguous (unlike alphabet). There’s segmental script, of course.
In your tree I would usually use singular “script” where you chose plural “scripts” and sometimes I would use “alphabet” (or a similar term) instead of “script”, e.g. for Arwi. Often you would have “Culture script” (includes transliteration) and “Language alphabet” (may include transcription) or “Language writing system” (contains alphabet/syllabary/signary(s), orthography, partially phonology). — Christoph Päper 18:47, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply
I guess for Brahmic you would leave the plural? That is because the sub-elements almost share no glyphs, while the ones in the Latin group do share? If a system like Arwi only extends something it would not be a new script? Maybe better to document all the namings in a NC than in a talk page, I started Wikipedia:Naming conventions (writing systems). Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 19:53, 31 July 2011 (UTC)Reply

Has everyone visited Wikipedia:Naming conventions (writing systems) and its talk page? VIWS talk 08:36, 1 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Yes, comments there may be useful. It illustrates how several aspects of our current naming are somewhat disordered. — kwami (talk) 21:36, 2 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Codifying the Coroboy proposal edit

I'd like to take a stab at codifying User:Coroboy's proposal from Wikipedia Talk:WikiProject Writing systems. This should be taken as my interpretation of how to apply those principles, not Coroboy's interpretation or intention.

In these descriptions, L is a language name or script convention, S is a script name, C is a writing style, X is any modifying adjectives, and l/s/c/x means a term is only included if it is necessary to distinguish - eg English Latin alphabet is redundant, so we list it as "L s alphabet" to get English alphabet, but German Cyrillic alphabet.

National and Notational systems edit

"Scripts" edit

I'd like to get these in line with the above examples, with redirects from the "unmarked" terms, so:

Syllabics edit

Shorthand edit

Other edit

  • other - conventional name for large ideo/morpho/logo-graphic scripts

Caligraphic and typographic styles edit

Why not 'C script' as currently at Insular script, Nastaliq script?
I think is solves two issues: 1)sometime later, a writing style and script name are going to conflict. 2) by having different naming conventions, it allows semi-automated editors to differentiate between vastly different types of articles in the Writing systems project.
ISO 15924 gives a code to Fraktur, i.e. regards it as script. But I don't see why this is not just a different style of Latin. I think X (script) is confusing, if WP is of the opinion these are not scripts but styles. And if it is a script it should be Fraktur script. Clever idea to use X (script) vs X script, but I think it is confusing ;-) Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 21:40, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Yes, regardless of the ISO, we have sources below speaking of 'a fine fraktur hand'. Whether we can get away with that as a title I don't know, but IMO I agree that it what it is. On the other hand, many of the Indic 'scripts' are about as distinct as italic and fraktur hand, or kufic and nastaliq hands, but I think we would have problems calling them 'hands'. OR in any case; I doubt we'd have sources backing us up. — kwami (talk) 23:02, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Actually, we have two topics, fraktur hand and fracktur typeface, analogous to italic hand and italic typeface. Currently the fraktur article is mostly about the typeface; we could maybe split off an article on the hand. — kwami (talk) 23:21, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Bogdan, you have to realize what ISO 15924 is meant to codify. It is based on a system of tagging library records for language (I believe, ISO 639), and is intended to extend that purpose to the script. At one point in time, there was considered a need to specifically mark two Latin scribal traditions for library purposes. The fact is that 15924 is not some perfect end-all, be-all of classification. It is fundamentally pragmatic, and responds to needs that are not necessarily the same as ours. So please don't confuse having a 15924 code with anything other than having been recognized for a specific purpose, much as you should not mistake encoding in Unicode as a fundamental identity of a script. VanIsaacWS 08:46, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Script entities edit

  • Mark (other) - for marks limited to a single writing system

Groupings edit

  • L alphabets - conventions for writing a language in multiple scripts
Not going to be acceptable to call it 'Hindi'. Currently at Hindustani orthography.
It was an example, and Hindi is the only language I could think of at the time that I knew had two separate orthographies. How about:
    • Mongolian alphabets - for Mongolian orthographies of 'Phags Pa, Cyrillic, Mongolian, Tibetan, etc.
The problem is in calling it Hindi. Hindi is a language cluster; the standard language within that cluster is actually Urdu. But most Hindus will have an absolute shit fit if you call their language "Urdu", and many Muslims will have the same if you lump Urdu in with Hindi. It would need to be 'Hindi-Urdu alphabets' or st. But yes, 'Mongolian alphabets' is fine. — kwami (talk) 23:09, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Terms edit

Comments edit

That's my best shot for now. VIWS talk 01:57, 1 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

I like the general approach, though there will be problems with some specific cases. (I adjusted a few that stood out—sorry, prob'ly shouldn'ta done that. I took it as a working draught.) My concern is that we don't use the term "alphabet" to push value judgements, as we did before I made the moves to 'X alphabet'. — kwami (talk) 21:30, 2 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
There is no value judgement. There is no cabal trying to keep the little man down. It was just how naming conventions evolved. I think it has more to do with the fact that people who are interested in writing systems create articles for smaller, less well-known scripts, so they ended up with the more specific naming convention. The ones that got created early on by the less knowledgable ended up with "common" names, which means that the term "alphabet" gets bandied about rather liberally. VanIsaacWS 23:00, 2 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
They were once all at 'script'. That was our convention: 'alphabet' was used only for Greek-type scripts. (We just never wrote it up as a guideline.) But in the case of Hebrew and Arabic people objected, and got them moved to 'alphabet'. So no, there is no cabal, but popular scripts have lobbies to 'upgrade' them to 'alphabet', while obscure scripts are left to languish. The end result is the same. — kwami (talk) 02:15, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
  • Pan-Nigerian Alphabet - alphabet does not need capital a. -DePiep (talk) 20:38, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Kwami's version edit

I think that's probably too much detail, and in some cases makes minor decisions which do not have global impact and therefore can be left to the articles. Here's a condensed proposal, though I left out a few things like numerals. — kwami (talk) 22:04, 2 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Well, right now the project page has approximately that level of detail, so I mimicked it - actually, I copied it and added or deleted articles to illustrate points. VanIsaacWS

Script

The term 'script' is used with four meanings:

  1. A general segmental writing system, as opposed to its local instantiations:
  2. In the plural for a family or geographic group of such scripts; 'writing systems' conveys the same idea
  3. A calligraphic style; in many cases 'hand' may be used instead, and may avoid confusion with other uses of the term
  4. A non-segmental writing system, especially one which is logographic, mixed, or of unknown character
Alphabet

'Alphabet' is used for national instantiations of a segmental script, with a defined sorting order

The terms abjad and abugida, although often used in the text, are considered jargon and so are inappropriate for the title.

If an article conflates the script and an alphabet using that script, as at Georgian alphabet, then the name should reflect the preponderance of the coverage of the article: 'script' if it details the various alphabetic instantiations of the script, but 'alphabet' if it's largely limited to the dominant alphabet. Of course, these topics may eventually be sufficiently developed to split them into separate script and alphabet articles.

Syllabary
Exceptions

Exceptions may be made where a common name exists, and 'script', 'alphabet', or 'syllabary' is not necessary:

Note: "hieroglyphics" is deprecated.

Exceptions may also occur where a different technical term is widely used:

Modifiers

Modifiers may be used for subtypes or other cases of disambiguation:

What about... edit

What about the term "hand" for the writing styles, eg "Carolignian miniscule hand", or "Nastaliq hand". I just think we're going to run into a conflict somewhere if we go with "Nastaliq script". (Yes, I know there's an apostrophe somewhere in there, I just don't know exactly where it should go.) I'm not sure it works with "Fraktur hand". Maybe I'm splitting too many hairs, but I think we're moving in on a consensus, but I'd like to have a stable consensus for about a week before we start screwing around with all the article titles. Fortunately, I got approved recently for WP:AWB, so I will probably be able to automate a lot of this moving when it comes time. VanIsaacWS 23:08, 2 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Yes, I added in that suggestion above in the hope that it might be a viable convention. However, in some cases it clearly isn't: "seal hand", for example, isn't gonna fly, not least because it isn't handwriting. But "Nastaliq hand" does work: [2]. "Fraktur hand" can work too: [3][4]
Actually, in the case of Chinese I do see "running hand". There is even "seal hand",[5] but I'm dubious that would get far without a challenge.
BTW, moving things w AWB isn't much faster than moving them by hand, unless I'm missing something. — kwami (talk) 01:59, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Yeah, I started looking through the documentation for AWB, and it doesn't look like they have move functionality yet. I was going to use the Writing system assessment of importance=low to help generate a list of letters that have non-standard names, and move them en-mass, but it looks like I may need to find a bot operator to help. VanIsaacWS 02:28, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
There is a move option, but if I remember right all it does is fill in the reason for you. You still have to move each individually, just as with edits, and I don't think it will even automate script → alphabet in the name. — kwami (talk) 02:42, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

I like to see your listings. I am not happy with Greek preference over Latin. What do you think to always use "X (Y letter)" in case there is "X (letter)" anyway?

Regarding "Brahmic scripts (or perhaps Brahmic alphabets)" - the latter would collect the instantiations the former the scripts, so this would not be synonymous. Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 21:42, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

The Greek preference over Latin is simply because if you are looking for the letter lambda or alpha, it's probably the Greek version you want, not the Latin one. None of the "regular" Latin letters have names that conflict with Greek letters, so it's basically a rule that X (letter) should always go to the regular Latin or Greek letter. VanIsaacWS 22:21, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Correct, 'Brahmic alphabets' would not be synonymous. It's been a while since I've looked at that article.
I'm undecided about Nagachop's letter suggestions. I think Ng (Arabic letter) is superior, because otherwise we wouldn't know we're talking about a letter: an "ng" could be a relative of the "oud" or something, for those who know nothing of Arabic phonology. In other cases the greater dab would be unnecessary, though perhaps still helpful.
Given all the details involved in letter names, that is IMO really a second topic. And numeral systems a third. I don't think we need consensus on those in order to move forward with the scripts. If consensus is easy it's probably not necessary, and if it's difficult we are probably creating problems for ourselves later, since we'll almost certainly overlook something vital. We could always add a section on glyphs and on numerals if we find reason later on. — kwami (talk) 22:58, 3 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Ng (Arabic) could be a word like Abd (Arabic). But if the article is about a character of the script, then better not let the people think it has to do with the language. Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 03:23, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Agreed. — kwami (talk) 22:50, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Honing in on a consensus edit

Script names edit

I think we are seeing an emerging consensus on "X script" for all of the scripts out there, eg "Latin script", "'Phags Pa script", "Jurchen script"; and "X alphabet" for national alphabets, notation systems, and other symbol collections for specific languages or use, eg "Belarusian Latin Alphabet", "NATO phonetic alphabet", "Russian alphabet" (implied Cyrillic), "American manual alphabet", etc. The plural forms "X scripts" and "X alphabets" should be used for describing a family of scripts, and the collection of script conventions for writing a given language or in a particular medium, eg. "Brahmic scripts", "Semitic scripts", "Belarusian alphabets", "Semaphore alphabets", "Manual alphabets". If anyone objects, or wishes to add any addenda, please add a dot with your contribution. If we have a consensus for a week, I say we implement it. VanIsaacWS 00:37, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Are you proposing we return to 'Phags-pa script because it's multilingual? — kwami (talk) 03:50, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
No. I am proposing 'Phags Pa script because it is consistent with all the other script names. Naming things based on the number of different languages that use a particular script seems like madness from my perspective. 'Phags Pa is a distinct set of glyphs that are used together to represent language in written form. Hence, it is a script. If, on the other hand, we were writing an article about how a distinct set of glyphs are used together to represent a specific language, then it would be, eg, the Mongolian 'Phags Pa alphabet. VanIsaacWS 08:23, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
PS, I am sure there are many script articles that will contain the information on how a script was used to write the major language it was used for. Just because a script article does not yet merit a content fork for the language representation aspect does not override the naming convention for scripts. VanIsaacWS
  • comment 1 Undecided for the alphabet names, but script names seem fine. One set of scripts one finds at ISO 15924#List of codes which ideally matches the items in Category:Scripts with ISO 15924 four-letter codes. There are also pages like the ones in Category:Unicode blocks. Arabic alphabet has some blocks inside the article. What will happen with Template:List of writing systems - Under alphabet it has Cyrillic, IPA, Latin. Cyrillic per the new definition is not an alphabet. IPA is part of the Latin script. BTW, NATO phonetic alphabet, is actually only used by the NATO and it is not phonetic. Seems like a double error. All in all, for the individual scripts we have a clear standard that we would use as basic reference, namely ISO 15924, correct? Fraktur being one of the deviations. I am already curious how the result of the reorganization will look like. Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 03:11, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
None of this has to do with the classification of scripts. There is no new redifining, there is no effort to change content. The Latin script is still alphabetic, as is Cyrillic. We are only trying to hone in on a consistent nomenclature for script articles that allows for reliable navigation and proper disambiguation, not overturn the technical classification of writing systems. I'm sorry that the NATO phonetic alphabet is named that way, but they call the "Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, Echo..." systems phonetic alphabets for some damnable reason - and it's not just the NATO version. The templates will all be updated with the new links, but I don't think that any content should be changed without a separate discussion at template talk. Like I said, this is only about the standardization of article names. Unicode blocks have standardized names that should not be altered, unless a naming convention along the lines of X (Unicode block) were to be decided. VanIsaacWS 03:40, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
(edit conflict) The NATO Phonetic Alphabet is not a script, so wouldn't be covered by our convention. Yes, it's a misnomer, but a pretty entrenched one.
Unfortunately, we do need to handle them, because semaphore systems, telegraph codes, braille representations, "phonetic" alphabets and the like are all under the purview of the Writing systems WikiProject. Whether we like it or not, we are the keepers of those articles.
IPA isn't really Latin. Part is Greek (ɸβθɣχʋʎɛɑ), and a bit is even Arabic (ʕ, though filtered through Latin). I think it would count as a distinct script. Or semi-distinct, anyway.
This comes up every once in a while, but I think there are very important reasons to treat IPA as a Latin alphabet, not the least of which is that it is based on the Latin typographic tradition, not Greek or Arabic.
Also, we need to consider what to do when s.t. is both an alphabet and a script. IMO we should go with 'alphabet'; it's not clear to me if, say, Kannada–Telugu, Mon–Burmese and Thai–Lao would be the scripts, with Kannada, Telugu, Mon, Burmese, Thai, and Lao being instantiations of those. Calling national forms 'alphabets' would avoid the ambiguity, and also cut down on use of the ambiguous term 'script'. — kwami (talk) 03:50, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
I think we need to stick with script unless the article specifically deals only with the use of a given script for writing a particular language. Otherwise, we are moving essential content around when we discover that another language uses a particular script, and that can't be good. I believe that except for the large ideo/morpho/logo-graphic sets, basically every writing system in ISO-15924 should have an article name ending in "script". There may be several instances where X alphabet redirects to a section of a script article that deals with how a script is used to represent a given language, but that's ok by me. VanIsaacWS 08:39, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
So we'd need to move Greek alphabetGreek script and Hebrew alphabetHebrew script, as well as Armenian, Coptic, Estrangelo, Gaelic Latin, and Phoenician. — kwami (talk) 08:48, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
That would be my preference. The article "Greek script" would contain information, not just on the modern script, but to all of the historical forms (polytonics, archaic letters, historic Doric and Ionian forms). Then you could have two other articles "Greek alphabet" and "Greek polytonic alphabet" about how the Greek script is used to represent modern and ancient forms of Greek, respectively, as well as a possible "Greek Linear alphabet" for the use of Linear B to write pre-Macedonian Greek, if such content ever needed to be forked from the "Linear B script" article. The same for Hebrew, Armenian, Coptic (this may be an edge case whether to unify with Greek script), Estrangelo, and Phoenician. Gaelic Latin, refering to the insular type, should probably take the nomenclature of a "hand", rather than a script, whatever standard we settle on for those stylistic variants. VanIsaacWS 10:22, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Well sure, if we have separate articles for the script and alphabet, they should be called just that. But generally we won't. We'll have one article that combines the two. Our conventions should keep that in mind. Since the emphasis tends to be on the alphabet itself, IMO that should be the title. Cf. Thai alphabet, which is about the script as it's used in Thai, with highly language-specific tone rules; Georgian alphabet, which is primarily its application to Georgian. If articles for the other alphabets of the Georgian script are ever written, the current article is likely to be kept for the Georgian alphabet. Of course, the article could be rewritten, with Georgian alphabet as just one section, but as you've noted, our goal here is not to rewrite the articles, but to name them as they are currently written. — kwami (talk) 10:38, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
I guess I consider the script to be the most important level of the hierarchy. It's the presence of all of the technical stuff about code pages, letter-form evolution, and typographic traditions that seems to be the heart of these articles to me. How a language is represented by them seems almost parenthetical to me. VanIsaacWS 11:11, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

I am for splitting articles, so topics are clear. I also think it is the most important level. A script is a collection of characters. Then, what we call alphabets, deploy some or all of the characters and associate them with a more restricted pronunciation. E.g. in the Mapudungun alphabet, h is used for . But most of the Mapu letters follow common variation. But this all is a little bit floating, e.g. the shapes Р/Ρ/P on my screen are exactly the same, but belong to Cyrillic/Greek/Latin. Maybe the script articles can include possible pronunciations of the characters in the future. Vanisaac also mentioned Coptic vs Greek. I think each script that has an entry in ISO 15924 should get a script article. So we refer to an official ISO standard and can then avoid debates on how we think the stuff should be arranged. So even Fraktur would get a script page. But the article can state that x, y, z sources regard it as a variant of Latin. Same for Coptic. Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 17:00, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

(@ VI & Nagachop) But that's not the business of naming conventions to decide. If you wish to split the articles, or create new articles, you are of course welcome to do so (assuming the results are sufficiently well developed to satisfy other editors), but we shouldn't tell people to do so here. Most of the articles concern themselves almost entirely with the alphabet, with the script elements being parenthetical, often limited to a note in the intro that it's used to write local minority languages, but without going into any detail, or even clarifying if those minority languages actually have their own alphabets. (Sometimes languages are simply written ad hoc in the majority alphabet, without any formal distinction.) That may not be the proper weight for the articles in your opinion, but the solution is to actually expand or split the article, not to pontificate in the naming conventions. Our job is to advise people on how to name articles as they are currently written, not on how to write the articles or what they should cover. That belongs in the MOS.
Also, the ISO standard is hardly the end-all of philological research. The World's Writing Systems, for example, treats Kannada and Telugu together, as it does Thai and Lao. There are numerous minority Tai alphabets in the same family, arguably a single script, and historically we speak of the Kannada-Telugu script as well. They look somewhat different, but no more so than the various hands of Latin, Arabic, or Chinese. I don't think we should advocate blindly following some bureaucratic convention when facts on the ground may indicate otherwise. Although the ISO may be a convenient starting point for scripts, just as it is for languages, IMO we shouldn't follow it just because it's the ISO, any more than we do for languages. Take a look at our language articles: some have no ISO code, and some combine several ISO codes together, because that's what the lit supports.
BTW, I just noticed that Ethnologue uses the phrase 'Latin script' when describing the writing systems of small languages which have their own Latin alphabets, exactly what we're proposing here. — kwami (talk) 22:47, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
I never said that you have to content fork those X alphabet contents, only that we could do that, and that I believe the naming convention of X script allows the most leeway. For instance, let's pretend that we've named the article on the Greek script "Greek alphabet", and it contains the combined contents of a Greek script and Greek alphabet pages. Now someone wants to add information on a hypothetical Turkish Greek alphabet to the page. By having the page named "Greek alphabet", the *Turkish Greek alphabet doesn't actually fit there, even though it logically belongs there. If, on the other hand, it was named "Greek script", then you can have any number of national alphabets that use that script listed and described on that page, without any conflict between the article name and the contents. That's the big quesiton. Are we going to have to dynamically rename pages as content is added? Naming all scripts, by default, as X script keeps us from having to do that. VanIsaacWS 23:37, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Malayalam alphabet would go back to Malayalam script? Category:Brahmic scripts maybe needs clean up. I already removed Category:Philippine scripts and Category:Indonesian scripts since they are not all Brahmic. @ISO 15924 relevance - their groupings of characters may end up in Unicode/ISO/IEC 10646 and then be exposed to lot of people. So I think to have individual articles might be fine, even if they only state that the definition is not supported by many people. @MOS vs NC - yes, some of my thoughts related to MOS. But the article name relates to the content, so some mentioning of article content could be ok. But it doesn't matter much. There is a lot of clean up work waiting. I created WP:NCWS. Coro, Kwami, Vanisaac and me, we are now already 4 editors supporting "X script" for the basic articles. Several X alphabets have only been moved by Kwami last WE, so moving them back to X script should be fine? I would like to clean up the Brahmic stuff. @Vanisaac, I think we could also create new articles for Latin script, Arabic script. Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 23:43, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
I have no problem with creating article forks if necessary, but it should be done because we are going to be making a distinct content choice regarding the separate articles, not just to have articles that correspond to our hierarchy. I just think there is a distinct difference between general script properties like encoding, glyph evolution, glyph variants, writing styles, etc., and the use of a script to represent a given language. The fact that these are contained in the same article in many instances just means we need to figure out our default name, and which content should be forked out of the original article. I happen to think that the "script" articles are the prefect breeding ground for "alphabet" content, which can then be forked into separate "alphabet" articles when that content, by itself, is beyond, say, start class. Does that seem like a reasonable perspective?
Yeah, I think category:Philipine scripts is pretty limited - I can think of three, and I don't even know if they have separate articles. I know there are separate Unicode encodings, but I tend to think of them collectively as simple typographic variants of each other. I think I'm getting off topic. I'd definitely open a thread on Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Writing systems to discuss it, though. Just in case people are using that category for something. VanIsaacWS 04:24, 5 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Your comment on Philippine scripts is what I was thinking. Is there just one, with various hands developed into alphabets by different nations? I don't know, but that would affect our naming.
I have the opposite view on the default name. If 90% of the material in the Georgian X article is on the Georgian alphabet, then the article should be called 'Georgian alphabet'. Other Georgian-script-based alphabets will most likely be given separate articles anyway, not lumped in with the Georgian alphabet. That, at least, is AFAIK how our articles generally develop. We shouldn't name an article based on what we judge it might become, but on what it is. — kwami (talk) 06:07, 5 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
No no, I don't think this is about what an article might become, but whether its name actually reflects both the present content and welcomes the content that rightly belongs there. Right now, when I look at "Greek alphabet", its content is almost entirely about the Greek script. There's a separate article, "Greek orthography" that I think is what we are looking for with our Greek alphabet page. Same thing with the "Georgian alphabet". Basically none of that article is on how the Georgian language is represented by the Georgian script. It has the development of the majescule, ecclesiastical, and modern miniscule cases. It discusses ligatures and obsolete letters, transliteration, and Unicode encoding. Of those sections, transliteration is the only one that may belong in a "Georgian alphabet" article. The rest is on the script, regardless of language. Note, however, that the Greek script article has a brief introduction to minority and historic langauges that used the Greek script. That's exactly the kind of content that our script pages should have, but an article named X alphabet is much more hostile to that content than X script. I think that's a fact worth considering. VanIsaacWS 10:03, 5 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Sure it's worth considering. But if it's background info for the intro, then that's not the topic of the article and therefore not the proper name. Any alphabet article is likely to have some background info on the script, esp. if the script is predominantly a single alphabet, and I don't see how calling in an 'alphabet' would make the article hostile to such info, though if expanded enough we'd prob'ly want to split it off. But these are the kinds of article-specific decisions that should be made on each article's talk page; they have little to do with us. — kwami (talk) 12:56, 5 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

I think a test implementation could help. I started with Arabic script, the table there (Arabic script#Table) lists Nastaliq, Shahmukhi and Jawi. These are scripts by themselves? Then there would be Arabic scripts as a group. What about Perso-Arabic. If there is at least on Arabic Latin alphabet (naming like in Uyghur Latin alphabet) then there would be several Arabic alphabets (Arabic the language). On the other hand there are already several Arabic alphabets listed, like Belarusian Arabic alphabet. Which category is higher up, "Arabic script" or "Arabic scripts"?Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 17:31, 5 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
I think we need to go with VI's idea of default script/alphabet. Without a dab, "Arabic alphabet" can only mean the Arabic script. Any other Arabic alphabet would need to be specified (Arabic Cyrillic?), but that one does not. That's basic application of COMMONNAME.
I'd say "Arabic script", sg. Whether Jawi is considered a script or not, the Arabic script is still conceptually a single entity. We shouldn't move our articles between sg. and pl. every time s.o. argues that some instantiation is a script in its own right. That would simply create chaos, with no benefit that I can see.
I don't know about Jawi being a script. Maybe 'Jawi variant of the Arabic script'? But we could have 'Jawi script' as a subcat of 'Arabic script', why not? 'Song birds' are a subcat of 'perching birds'. But AFAIK Jawi is just an alphabet. — kwami (talk) 07:32, 6 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
Jawi article says it is also used in the Philippines, that may mean for another language than Malay. I hope we can cleanup Category:Scripts with ISO 15924 four-letter codes, some thoughts at Template talk:Infobox writing system#Automatic categories by ISO category. Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 01:59, 7 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Others edit

At this point, it appears we do not yet have a consensus on some of the more peripheral matters, such as letter names, so let's keep working on that separately. VanIsaacWS 00:37, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Yeah, I'd just as soon get the scripts done, and do letters, digits, typefaces, etc. later if needed. It may not be needed.
Which version should we work with? Are we each wedded to our own, or can we consolidate them? — kwami (talk) 07:15, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
I altered the NC page [6]. I suggest to keep the observations of July for a while so we don't forget anything. In the top I added what we agreed to and tried to say what a script with respect to that NC can be. This ISO reference so far is only a proposal by me. Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 17:19, 4 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Letters edit

Just for future discussion:

  • Pe (letter) - about the Semitic letter -> Pe (Semitic letter)
  • Pe (Cyrillic) -> Pe (Cyrillic letter), to make clear it is not about any non-letter concept in the Cyrillic script
  • Pe (Persian) -> Pe (Persian letter)

Is Pe (Arabic letter) or Pe (Arabic script letter) ambiguous? Bogdan Nagachop (talk) 23:04, 6 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Draught edit

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section. A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
(moved to project page; propose revisions in a new section)

Articles on writing systems typically consist of a proper or other identifying name combined with a broad typological classification of the script, such as the following:

Script

The term 'script' is used with four meanings:

  1. A general segmental writing system, as opposed to its local instantiations:
  2. In the plural for a family or geographic group of such scripts. 'Writing systems' conveys the same idea:
  3. A calligraphic style. In many cases 'hand' may be used instead, and may this avoid confusion with other uses of the term 'script':
  4. A non-segmental writing system, especially one which is logographic, mixed, or of unknown character:
Alphabet

'Alphabet' is used for national instantiations of a segmental script, usually with a defined sorting order:

The terms abjad and abugida, though often used in the text, are considered jargon and inappropriate for a title.

If an article conflates a script and the dominant alphabet using that script, as Georgian alphabet does, then the name should reflect the preponderance of the coverage of the article: 'Script' if it details the various alphabets that use the script, but 'alphabet' if it's largely concerned with the orthography of the dominant alphabet. These topics may of course be developed sufficiently to split into separate script and alphabet articles.

Syllabary
Exceptions

Exceptions may be made where a unambiguous conventional name exists, and thus 'script', 'alphabet', or 'syllabary' is not necessary:

Note: "hieroglyphics" is deprecated.

Exceptions may also occur where a different technical term is widely used:

Modifiers

Modifiers may be used for subtypes or other cases of disambiguation:

Glyphs

Names should include some indication that the article concerns a glyph and not a word.

The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

comments edit

Few recent comments above, so I'm moving my suggestions, trimmed a bit, down as a draught, and adding a pared-down version of the glyphs. We shouldn't over-dab, I think. That would go against our general NC's. — kwami (talk) 23:59, 15 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Looks good to me. VanIsaacWS 02:06, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
First quick remark: OK in general line. Fraktur leads to a dab page. Would like to cross-check with ISO and Unicode usage (Cyrillic cleaned up nicely), but not now. Unfortunately, the ISO 15924 templates are deleted yesterday. -DePiep (talk) 14:24, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Just added zeta so people don't try adding '(letter)' to every single article using this page as justification. (Actually, we might want that, but it would be a new convention and could be discussed here in the future.)

I think Fraktur is covered by WP:primary topic; the other article can be handled with a hat note.

What do you mean by "Cyrillic cleaned up nicely"? — kwami (talk) 14:28, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

At Cyrillic [7], I concluded: no dab involved, not "Cyrillic language" involved, and both ISO 15924 and Unicode alias names are without any specifier. This might be a rare exception in the list of writing systems. -DePiep (talk) 20:31, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

I've moved the Perso-Arabic article to Persian alphabet, since it deals primarily with just that. But many of the incoming links deal with Pashto or other Persian-derived alphabets, so perhaps we should split off a Perso-Arabic script article? — kwami (talk) 17:27, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

The article seems to deal with the Persian alphabet and has links to many of the other alphabets that are Perso-Arabic based. If the treatment of some of the minority alphabets starts to get large enough, I'm sure we can branch the article, but I don't think this article will ever naturally fork the "Persian alphabet" content. That says to me that it's probably the right name. VanIsaacWS 17:41, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Okay, I've moved some articles and categories in accordance with this, to see if there would be any opposition since not many people watch the NC pages, and the only potential issue was with Cyrillic 'script'. Not clear if it was an actual objection or just a desire for discussion, but I moved our example down to plain 'Cyrillic'. Moved draught to WP space and linked from the main NC page. Closing the draught above so that we can keep track of where we came from; we can always open it again below if need be. — kwami (talk) 18:48, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Yes, 'national' wasn't right. But sometimes languages share alphabets, don't they? How about 'specific applications'? Currently also mentions individual lanugages. — kwami (talk) 21:07, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
If an alphabet is specific to more than one language then it’s still language-specific. The point is that scripts are not, they’re language-agnostic. — Christoph Päper 22:40, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
How's that? — kwami (talk) 23:44, 16 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
If I understand Crissov well, the description should cover the plural: Alphabet is specific to one or more languages. Still, in the singular phrasing, to me it reads like covered as well. Somehow, the singular one does not exclude the plural (it does not exclude another language). If I am correct in this, we can use the simpler option. Either way: "language" is preferred to "nation". -DePiep (talk) 08:08, 17 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
To which "one or more languages" is the International Phonetic Alphabet specific? If it excludes use by, or application to, any language... isn't it incomplete? – Raven  .talk 08:47, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

I really like the note about the Georgian alphabet vs. Georgian script part. I think it captures the balancing act that I have been advocating far better than I have ever phrased it. VanIsaacWS 15:08, 17 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Guideline status edit

Could someone point me the way of any discussions held to whether this should be marked as a guideline? Grandiose (me, talk, contribs) 19:57, 17 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

What, exactly, would that do? VanIsaacWS 20:40, 17 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
"New proposals require discussion and a high level of consensus from the entire community for promotion to guideline or policy"; I realise this is a naming convention but it basically fits under guideline (at least the notification bot thinks so). I just wanted to check whether this had been met, or whether it needs to be discussed now. Grandiose (me, talk, contribs) 21:13, 17 August 2011 (UTC)Reply
If you think it's necessary, then do it, but this isn't an isolated discussion. It actually started over on WikiProject Writing Systems, and was moved over here to facilitate the discussion and pull all the activity off the WikiProject talk page. It really is only a convention that is being agreed to by the major contributors to Writing Systems articles. I certainly don't have any intention of treating this as a policy that would be brought to an RfC or anything like that. It's merely a convention that we are going to implement because we have some VERY inconsistent naming in the project right now, and we need to get some sort of understanding about where we want to go in the future. I can't speak for anyone else, but I don't intend to treat it as a policy, I intend to treat it as a convention. VanIsaacWS 21:46, 17 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Magical alphabets edit

  Resolved
 – Guidelines updated to address magical alphabets and ciphers.

Magical alphabets need to be addressed in these guidelines, as the current attempts to apply WP:NCWS to them are causing controversy. Magical alphabets, such as the Theban alphabet, Alphabet of the Magi, Celestial Alphabet, Malachim, and Transitus Fluvii, although they may technically be "scripts" (or more accurately "ciphers"), are almost universally referred to as "alphabets" in reliable sources. We should also refer to them as alphabets on Wikipedia to reflect predominant usage in reliable sources, reduce confusion, and retain discoverability on search engines. Nosferattus (talk) 23:11, 7 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

@Vanisaac, Kwamikagami, .Raven, Double sharp, and Randy Kryn: Pinging folks involved in the Theban script discussion. Nosferattus (talk) 23:15, 7 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I agree that these should be treated consistently. There is a difference from the main concern of WPWS in that these are fictional scripts, more ideal than reality. We're highly unlikely to ever have a family of Theban or Celestial (or Klingon) alphabets, the way we do Latin and Arabic, so one could argue that the motivation for the script/alphabet distinction doesn't apply in these cases. We do something similar with unilingual scripts such Armenian than are hardly used for anything other than the language they were created for. But if that's what ppl agree on, I think there should be a mention of it on NCWS. Something like "the script/alphabet distinction does not need to be apply to fictional scripts that are unlikely to ever be developed into a family of alphabets for individual languages." — kwami (talk) 01:31, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I agree with kwami. Double sharp (talk) 03:21, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
> "We're highly unlikely to ever have a family of Theban or Celestial (or Klingon) alphabets" — There are already multiple Klingon alphabets – the "Klinzhai" or "Mandel system" from The U.S.S Enterprise Officer’s Manual (1980), 27 characters (representing, respectively, K,L,I,NG,O,N,F,B,D,G,A,M,X,TH,H,V,J,E,S,Y,W,P,OO,T,R,U,Z); the equally jagged pIqaD developed by the Astra Image Corporation (used randomly in the shows and movies); the "Skybox pIqaD " using just ten of those characters; and the tlhIngan pIqaD, 26 of those characters remapped to the letters of Marc Okrand's tlhIngan Hol (a,b,ch,D,e,ng,gh,H,I,j,q,l,m,n,o,p,Q,r,s,t,u,v,w,tlh,y,'), plus another 10 for numerals, by the Klingon Language Institute – this is the one registered in the ConScript Unicode Registry (CSUR) – even not counting the Latin-script romanization most Klingon(ist)s actually use. And let's also not forget that before Marc Okrand's tlhIngan Hol there was the Klingonaase language of John M. Ford's novel The Final Reflection (1984), only seen romanized in that book and the FASA Trek RPG "Klingons" supplement he coauthored; its saying "Nel khomerex, khesterex" [that which does not grow, dies] still circulates, including in business. See Schoen, Lawrence M. "Some Comments on Orthography" (PDF). HolQeD (1). Klingon Language Institute. – Raven  .talk 08:25, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Once again, you completely miss the point. I'm speaking of a family of alphabets based on one of the Klingon scripts. If you really still don't understand what a "script" is, then that's all the more reason to be rigorous, so that people like you do not get confused. — kwami (talk) 23:16, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
You clearly didn't read what I wrote. Astra Image Corporation developed the pIqaD script, which the shows and movies only used randomly. Skybox turned ten of that script's characters into multi-value letters (it took two characters together to represent some sounds); the KLI took 26 of that script's characters to represent Okrand's language. Family of alphabets using one script, just as you say.
Wow, and you accuse me of missing the point, not understanding, and being confused! – Raven  .talk 08:35, 9 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
@Kwamikagami: What would you think about adding something like: Fictional scripts, ciphers, and other special purpose writing systems may deviate from these guidelines. Nosferattus (talk) 22:49, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
That sounds like it could work. — kwami (talk) 23:19, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I am concerned about adding "fictional scripts" to this. Off the top of my head, I know there are multiple Tengwar script alphabets such the Quenya, Sindarin, and Black Speech alphabets. When it comes to fictional scripts, I think you may even be more likely to need to be precise in the distinction between script and alphabet than with natural language writing systems because of the proliferation of natural language scripts to have historic and mythological names independent of the language(s) that use the writing system. But I agree that ciphers in particular, because they are by definition fairly closely bound by the orthographic conventions of another script, are largely immune from ever having the script/alphabet distinction become part of article content, let alone justifying content fork articles that would require the disambiguation of a script vs. alphabet naming convention. VanIsaac, GHTV contWpWS 01:20, 9 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
A "binding" factor for some conscripts comes from publications, which (as long as they last, in this Internet Archive/Google Books age potentially forever) provide reference material for – and thus stability to – that version of the script and alphabet. People are still expanding the vocabulary of the "Elvish" and "Orcish" languages, but they're not altering Tengwar because JRRT set the full system(s) in stone.
But as for ciphers, look what happened to Morse code, not just the 26 letters you learned as a kid: accented letters remapped according to language; punctuation and other symbols; it's been nearly two decades now since they added "@" to ease sending email addresses. Only one rarely seen Theban font has tried adding numbers and punctuation – not likely to become standard unless it gets used more. Theban's been around about three centuries longer than Morse, but other than lone fontmakers no-one's tried to expand it like Morse (probably because everyone goes to old stable sources to learn it); what a stick-in-the-mud it is! – Raven  .talk 09:16, 9 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
How about: Magical alphabets, ciphers, and other special purpose writing systems may deviate from these guidelines.? Nosferattus (talk) 20:12, 10 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
No objections come to mind. — kwami (talk) 21:48, 10 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Ditto. Go for it! – Raven  .talk 10:24, 11 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Done. Nosferattus (talk) 22:06, 17 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

RFC on alphabet definition edit

Should "alphabet" in WP:NCWS include letter-sets for specific uses (e.g. ISO basic Latin alphabet, International Phonetic Alphabet, Theban alphabet), as well as for specific languages (e.g. Somali's Kaddare alphabet and Osmanya alphabet; Zaghawa's Zaghawa alphabet; Mandaic's Mandaic alphabet)? Background: per Vanisaac's comment opening WT:NCWS#Honing in on a consensus, "I think we are seeing an emerging consensus on 'X script' for all of the scripts out there, eg 'Latin script', ' 'Phags Pa script', 'Jurchen script'; and 'X alphabet' for national alphabets, notation systems, and other symbol collections for specific languages or use, eg 'Belarusian Latin Alphabet', 'NATO phonetic alphabet', 'Russian alphabet' (implied Cyrillic), 'American manual alphabet', etc. The plural forms 'X scripts' and 'X alphabets' should be used for describing a family of scripts, and the collection of script conventions for writing a given language or in a particular medium, eg. 'Brahmic scripts', 'Semitic scripts', 'Belarusian alphabets', 'Semaphore alphabets', 'Manual alphabets'" ("or use" emphasis added by me).

The text later placed by a different editor, without consensus, omitted the "or use:" alternative: "'Alphabet' is used for language-specific adaptations of a segmental script, usually with a defined sorting order and sometimes with not all of the letters, or with additional letters" (emphasis added again). That same editor has since cited his own text to insist that the ISO basic Latin alphabet, the IPA, and Theban, which can be used by multiple languages, are therefore not "alphabets", but "scripts". As this aspect of the "convention" was not consensus – his draft received two comments, one disagreeing, one not clearly either supporting or opposing – it's a one-person "rule" with no moral force in my opinion. I reverted to reinstate the prior version and add "or use-specific" per the consensus mentioned above: "'Alphabet' is used for specific applications of a segmental script, usually with a defined sorting order and sometimes with language-specific or use-specific letters" (emphasis added; the text other than "or use-specific" is from the prior version). He reverted my reversion. At this point I decline to edit-war, and instead post this RfC.

Lengthy foregoing discussion at Talk:Theban script#Requested move 3 April 2023 and WT:NCWS, as well as side-discussions at User talk:.Raven#Script vs alphabet and User talk:Kwamikagami#"Script" in article titles. Please note Merriam-Webster's definition 1(a) of "alphabet": "a set of letters or other characters with which one or more languages are written especially if arranged in a customary order" (emphasis added again). – Raven  .talk 04:39, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

  • The issue is how we distinguish "Latin alphabet" meaning I (the alphabet used for Latin: now at Latin alphabet) from "Latin alphabet" meaning II (the set of letters used to form hundreds of Latin-based alphabets: now at Latin script) and similarly Arabic alphabet from Arabic script. The consensus for the past 12 years has been that we use "script" for the writing system and "alphabet" for the application of that writing system to a particular language -- e.g. English alphabet and Italian alphabet as applications of the Latin script, and Persian alphabet and Urdu alphabet as applications of the Arabic script. For those who insist that Arabic is not an alphabet, we generally say something like "alphabetic script" for the concept of a "true" alphabet ("alphabet" meaning III, as per Daniels & Bright). We sometimes don't bother with the distinction in cases where a writing system is hardly used outside the language it was designed for, e.g. Armenian alphabet, or when "Alphabet" is part of the name, e.g. International Phonetic Alphabet or NATO phonetic alphabet (which isn't a writing system at all.) User •Raven is upset at my move of Theban alphabet and would rather throw a spammer in the works than wait for that ongoing discussion to resolve itself. Though I do agree that fictional scripts such as Theban should probably be treated consistently, and have noted that the script/alphabet distinction is unlikely to be important in such cases, so we could easily make an exception for them if that's what people want. — kwami (talk) 05:01, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
    User Kwamikagami perhaps forgot he moved the Somali-only "Kaddare alphabet" to "Kaddare script"; "Osmanya alphabet" to "Osmanya script; "Borama alphabet" to "Borama script" (that last one's qualifier has since been changed to make it "Gadabuursi Somali Script", note caps)... each with the comment "it's a distinct script". (Not under the WP:NCWS he has quoted!) Likewise other moves he made the same day, e.g.: "Zaghawa alphabet" to "Zaghawa script" (created just for the language it's named after, but again he commented "it's a distinct script"); "Mandaic alphabet" to "Mandaic script" (only for the language it's named after... which may be part of why it was moved back in 2021); "Vithkuqi alphabet" to "Vithkuqi script" (created specifically for Albanian), with the comment "per article"... well, he had just made a prior edit to the article changing the wording, but the References section still has the term "alphabet" repeatedly, not the term "script" – where are his RSs for the change?
    Likewise the long-standing WP:COMMONNAMEs of the ISO basic Latin alphabet, International Phonetic Alphabet, and Theban alphabet (the last getting about 32,900 google-hits to just 74 for "Theban script"), meant nothing to him when he declared them all "scripts". His backing that 0.22+% against the 99.77+% on the basis of an edit (omission) he made himself... he now wants to claim as "consensus" because no-one else noticed and corrected this omission before? His "minor" change affected nothing until, about a decade later, he started moving pages and thumping his edit to support it... only when challenged about it. But as you can see, he renamed even "language-specific" alphabets "scripts", which contradicted his own "rule"'s criteria. He doesn't follow even his own version of WP:NCWS, the one he reverted a reversion to keep!
    In any case, creating an RfC was suggested by a different editor on WT:NCWS: "WP:NCWS is over ten years old now, and if we can come up with a better convention after these years of experience and all the new articles that have been created - a new convention that still makes the necessary technical distinctions of the original while allowing a more intuitive naming for articles all around - then I am 100% on board with opening an RFC tomorrow to do that. VanIsaac, GHTV ... 20:21, 7 April 2023 (UTC)" – and I am merely following that suggestion. – Raven  .talk 06:44, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
    Those are all scripts. Do you really not understand this very simple concept, or are you still playing stupid? — kwami (talk) 23:14, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
    Let me quote to you the first sentence of WP:NCWS#Alphabets as you've left it all this time: "'Alphabet' is used for language-specific adaptations of a segmental script, usually with a defined sorting order and sometimes with not all of the letters, or with additional letters:" [followed by a list of examples]. Kaddare, Osmanya, and Borama/Gadabuursi are all "language-specific" to the Somali language; Zaghawa to the language of that name; Mandaic ditto; Vithkuqi to Albanian. By a plain reading of WP:NCWS, they're alphabets. You've never explained why they should be called "scripts" instead, other than simply asserting it over and over, refusing to offer RSs even when repeatedly asked, and insulting your questioner. Those are the ad nauseam and abusive ad hominem fallacies, invalid arguments, devoid of persuasion.
    Beyond all these single-language alphabets, you did the same with the N'Ko alphabet, used by the specific group of Manding languages, and so designed that speakers of those languages can write to each other, and each hear their own language when reading it aloud. Doubtless you marked it "script" because it is used by a group of languages rather than just one. But this is not what was agreed to in the comments preceding your change. See above:
    "Yes, 'national' wasn't right. But sometimes languages share alphabets, don't they? How about 'specific applications'? Currently also mentions individual lanugages." — kwami, 21:07, 16 August 2011 (UTC)
    "If an alphabet is specific to more than one language then it’s still language-specific. The point is that scripts are not, they’re language-agnostic." — Christoph Päper, 22:40, 16 August 2011 (UTC)
    "How's that?" — kwami, 23:44, 16 August 2011 (UTC)
    "If I understand Crissov well, the description should cover the plural: Alphabet is specific to one or more languages. Still, in the singular phrasing, to me it reads like covered as well. Somehow, the singular one does not exclude the plural (it does not exclude another language). If I am correct in this, we can use the simpler option. Either way: 'language' is preferred to 'nation'." -DePiep, 08:08, 17 August 2011 (UTC)
    [emphasis added]
    You were part of that conversation, asked for clarification, and got it. Don't tell us you never saw it.
    Also see above: "... Any alphabet article is likely to have some background info on the script, esp. if the script is predominantly a single alphabet, and I don't see how calling in an 'alphabet' would make the article hostile to such info...." — kwami, 12:56, 5 August 2011 (UTC) [emphasis added] – Raven  .talk 02:16, 9 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
    See Clair, Kate; Busic-Snyder, Cynthia (2012-06-20). "Key Concepts". A Typographic Workbook: A Primer to History, Techniques, and Artistry. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley. p. 347. ISBN 9781118399880. alphabet: a set of visual characters or letters in an order fixed by custom. The individual characters represent the sounds of a spoken language. ... In addition to English, there are... Bassa (Vah),... International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA),.. N'Ko,... Somali (Osmanya),.... – Raven  .talk 20:16, 11 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I think these discussions are getting unnecessarily heated. We're all just trying to improve Wikipedia, but coming at it from different perspectives. Let's focus on reaching a compromise rather than on specific editors or edits. Nosferattus (talk) 19:32, 8 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
That would be nice. I repeat my proposal: add "for specific uses". Also, in view of the N'Ko alphabet name-change to N'Ko script, I think Christoph Päper's and DePiep's comments above are important – and should be reflected in the text – so explicitly saying "specific to one or more languages [or for one or more specific uses]" would be clearer than "language-specific" in the case of multi-language alphabets. Thus:
"'Alphabet' is used for adaptations of a segmental script specific to one or more languages or for one or more specific uses, usually with a defined sorting order and sometimes with not all of the letters, or with additional letters: ..."
I think this better expresses the consensus of the previous discussion. Any comments? – Raven  .talk 04:16, 9 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I think we should leave the wording to editors who understand what the NCWS says. — kwami (talk) 11:40, 9 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
And who compare it to the WT:NCWS discussion that preceded it, preserved directly above? And who look at the edits/moves that have been made using the present wording as justification? So that they can see the need for correction of that wording to match consensus? Or should they ignore all that context, kwami? Just asking. – Raven  .talk 13:43, 9 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

FYI, related to this discussion, Raven started a move request at Talk:N'Ko script. — kwami (talk) 22:01, 10 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

Some recent renaming proposals (and unilateral undiscussed moves!) of articles from "alphabet" to "script" have been motivated by Peter Daniels' recent attempted neologistic redefinition of the word "alphabet" to have a rigid narrow meaning, which does not match the definition of the word commonly found in dictionaries, or the scholarly usage of the word for centuries before Peter Daniels happened to come along (and often still today). I am VERY STRONGLY OPPOSED to renaming articles for that particular reason. The names of the "Hebrew alphabet" and "Arabic alphabet" articles are not going to be changed, which means that it's semi-stupid to try to get the article titles of lesser-known consonantal alphabets changed... AnonMoos (talk) 20:37, 12 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

If I'm understanding you correctly, that's not the reason. Rather, the distinction being made is between a writing system and the application of that writing system to a particular language, such as 'Latin script' vs 'Latin alphabet', or 'Arabic script' and 'Arabic alphabet'. The fact that one of those is a Daniels-alphabet and the other an abjad is irrelevant. If the article is analogous to 'Latin script', then it's labeled 'X script'; if it's analogous to 'Latin alphabet', then it's labeled 'X alphabet'. So for example we have Bengali script and alphabet, the Burmese script and alphabet, etc., despite them being abugidas. — kwami (talk) 09:21, 13 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Recall: "... Any alphabet article is likely to have some background info on the script, esp. if the script is predominantly a single alphabet, and I don't see how calling in an 'alphabet' would make the article hostile to such info...." — kwami, 12:56, 5 August 2011 (UTC)
In the cases presently at question, there is one article per alphabet/script, in fact "the script is predominantly a single alphabet", as you'd said. The question then is what it should be called. As all alphabets are types of scripts (which is why we see the infobox entry "Script type: alphabet") – but so are all abjads, all syllabaries, and all ideographic or logographic scripts – we know from seeing the word "alphabet" in the article title that it is a type of script... but seeing "script" in the title does not tell us whether it is an alphabet, abjad, syllabary, etc. Thus "alphabet" is the more informative (more helpful) title for that article, if it meets the definition in WP:NCWS#Alphabets, as the cases in question do.
The parallel issue for biology would be: should a species which is the sole member of its genus have its article titled by species name or by genus name? At present we prefer the more specific title (species) – if another species of that genus is found, the genus redirect can be changed to a dab, but the species article need not be renamed from "genus" – where it should not have been; I suggest the same should apply to the genus script and its sundry species (alphabet, abjad, etc.) where there is only one alphabet or whatever of that script (as with N'Ko, etc.). – Raven  .talk 23:47, 13 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Although in this case the proposal would mean moving articles back to "alphabet" from "script" (where they have already been moved). So how do you want your vote counted? – Raven  .talk 22:42, 12 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Comment Note that Raven has made 7 duplicate and apparently bad-faith move requests motivated by this same point. If they are decided independently, they may produce inconsistent results, and may contradict whatever is decided here and so have to be reversed. — kwami (talk) 09:24, 13 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
    (1) Those requests are not "duplicate"; each is on the talkpage of a different article, requesting the move of that article alone. The documentation is repeated, as the underlying issue remains.
    (2) "apparently bad-faith"? – You keep making this accusation. Please open that issue. E.g., your reversion of my text on the Osmanya article removed an RS citation, either deleted or munged urls on external references (in one case removing the anchor to the specific section relevant to the article, and changing the correct "https" to an incorrect "http"), even deleted the helpful hint "(load included fonts to see the characters)", all with the comment "rv: turning the article into a mess". (Well, true, you accomplished that.) Likewise your reversion on the Bassa Vah article, commenting "rv. making a mess of the article, deleting refs, adding unneeded POINTy refs to the lead, etc.", is what deleted one ref and unformatted others; now two refs are bare URLs. Yet I have not yet accused you of vandalism. Which of us is assuming good faith?
    (3) "may contradict whatever is decided here and so have to be reversed." – Since they cite and quote the current text of WP:NCWS#Alphabets, they are unaffected if this RFC fails. Since they are also compatible with this RFC's proposal(s), they are unaffected if this RFC succeeds. In other words, they are unaffected by this RFC either way. Why should they affect this RFC? – Raven  .talk 22:18, 13 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
    I've just seen how far back the pattern of this problem goes (at least). – .Raven  .talk 09:13, 14 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
  • Support Alphabet naming standard as described in the nomination, which works best for the articles discussed and well-researched by Raven both here and at the extremely studiously added references at the multiple RM's opened on this topic (which should all include the word 'alphabet' in their titles). And per AnonMoos. Common names seem to also endorse Raven's assertions. Randy Kryn (talk) 14:21, 13 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

Help with POV-warring edit

Could I have a bit of help with Raven's POV edit-warring?

NCWS may well be adjusted to support the moves they want, but meanwhile they're making disruptive edits in several articles in question: Osmanya script, Bassa Vah script, N'Ko script, playing right up to 3RR. These are all alphabetic scripts (my suggested compromise from previous "scripts"), but Raven is repeatedly changing them all to simple "alphabets" as if they were not also scripts. (I don't care if they want to reject my suggestion and revert to the status quo ante.) They're also adding multiple citations to the leads that they are alphabets, when no-one disputes that fact, and when such citations do not belong in the lead. They also continue with their Borat impression in refusing to understand even the simplest points. It's getting quite tiresome. — kwami (talk) 09:22, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

POV edit-warring? Let facts be submitted to a candid world. What kwami has reverted (with comments like "rv. troll", "rv POV warrior", "rv. chronic POV warrior", etc.) has included my adding brackets around "West Africa" to wikilink it; adding the sign for comma (⫠) in Bassa Vah with a ref [the Bassa Vah Association's keyboard chart] to WP:PROVEIT; adding a fully relevant external link to Omniglot; and my making the Defaultsort actually include the full article title, three short words – of which kwami deleted the middle one; adding "s" to the end of "http" for a link to Omniglot; adding a #sectiontag to the link so it would hit the page section actually discussing the wiki-article's topic; adding the comment "(load included fonts to see the characters)" – otherwise readers won't; and cites of RSs. kwami has refused when asked to cite RSs supporting kwami's edits. kwami has changed the word "alphabet" in articles as well as in titles to "script"; when changed back citing RSs, kwami reverts the edits, deleting the RSs; when the name (e.g. "Osmanya") is allowed to stand alone in a sentence, neutral because using (needing) neither term, kwami adds "script" to push kwami's own POV. Who is POV-warring here? The same person who changed numerous "alphabet" articles to "script" in the first place: kwami. Even WP:NCWS#Alphabets, as it stands, makes these "alphabets". Yet kwami thumps it as if it didn't contradict what kwami's doing. – .Raven  .talk 09:40, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
> "These are all alphabetic scripts..." — On page after page, you've replaced wikilinked alphabet (which is an actual article) with wikilinked alphabetic script (which is a #Redirect to alphabet, no #section specified). The term "alphabetic script" occurs twice in that article, once while saying "Cyrillic is one of the most widely used modern alphabetic scripts...", once while saying "Most alphabetic scripts of India and Eastern Asia descend from the Brahmi script..." It is neither defined, nor specifically differentiated from "alphabet", in that article.* I question the helpfulness of those edits, compared to linking directly to alphabet.
* Off-WP, the most frequent definition of alphabetic script, "a writing system based on alphabetic characters", also does not clearly distinguish it from an alphabet, save that definitions of "alphabet" usually also mention "arranged in a customary [or fixed] order" — suggesting that order may be absent from an alphabetic script.
This distinction makes sense in the case of Cyrillic, a script covering several languages' alphabets with different added characters, so the set and its order vary. But in the case of a single alphabet like Osmanya, Bassa Vah, N'Ko, or the others you've mentioned, there is one customary or fixed order (apiece), so "alphabet" fits better than "alphabetic script". – .Raven  .talk 09:29, 30 April 2023 (UTC)Reply