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Lepcha script

Abugida used to write the Lepcha language

Lepcha script

Abugida used to write the Lepcha language

FieldValue
nameLepcha
native_name
sampleFile:Róng ríng in Lepcha language script.svg
typeAbugida
fam1Egyptian
fam2Proto-Sinaitic
fam3Phoenician
fam4Aramaic
fam5Brahmi
fam6Gupta
fam7Tibetan
sistersMeitei, Khema, Phagspa, Marchen
childrenLimbu
languagesLepcha
timec. 1700–present
unicodeU+1C00–U+1C4F
iso15924Lepc

The Lepcha script, or Róng script, is an abugida used by the Lepcha people to write the Lepcha language. Unusually for an abugida, syllable-final consonants are written as diacritics.

History

Róng manuscript

Lepcha is derived from the Tibetan script, and may have some Burmese influence. According to tradition, it was devised at the beginning of the 18th century by prince Chakdor Namgyal of the Namgyal dynasty of Sikkim, or by scholar Thikúng Men Salóng in the 17th century. Early Lepcha manuscripts were written vertically. When they were later written horizontally, the letters remained in their new orientations, rotated 90° from their Tibetan prototypes. This resulted in an unusual method of writing final consonants.

Typology

Lepcha is now written horizontally, but the changes in the direction of writing have resulted in a metamorphosis of the eight syllable-final consonants from conjuncts (ligatures) as in Tibetan to superposed diacritics.

As in most other Brahmic scripts, the short vowel /-a/ is not written; other vowels are written with diacritics before (/-i, -o/), after (/-ā, -u/), or under (/-e/) the initial consonant. The length mark, however, is written over the initial, as well as any final consonant diacritic, and fuses with /-o/ and /-u/. (When fused as /-ō/, however, it lies below any final consonant.) Initial vowels do not have separate letters, but are written with the vowel diacritics on an &-shaped zero-consonant letter.

There are postposed diacritics for medial /-y-/ and /-r-/, which may be combined (krya). For medial /-l-/, however, there are seven dedicated conjunct letters. That is, there is a special letter for /kla/ which does not resemble the letter for /ka/. (Only /gla/ is written with a straightforward diacritic.)

One of the final letters, /-ŋ/, is an exception to these patterns. First, unlike the other finals, final /-ŋ/ is written to the left of the initial consonant rather than on top, occurring even before preposed vowels. That is, /kiŋ/ is written "ngki". Second, there is no inherent vowel before /-ŋ/: even short /-a-/ must be written, with a diacritic unique to this situation. (It appears to be the diacritic for long /-ā/ rotated 180° around the consonant letter.) That is, /kaŋ/ is written "ngka", rather than "" as would be expected from the general pattern.

Letters

As an abugida, a basic letter represents both a consonant followed by an inherent vowel. In Lepcha, the inherent vowel is . To start a syllable with a vowel, the appropriate vowel diacritic is added to the vowel-carrier . A vowel-carrier with no diacritic represents the sound .

Consonants

A consonant cluster can be formed by adding one of the subjoiners to a base letter.

Vowels

Numerals

Unicode

Main article: Lepcha (Unicode block)

Lepcha script was added to the Unicode Standard in April, 2008 with the release of version 5.1.

The Unicode block for Lepcha is U+1C00–U+1C4F:

References

  • Leonard van der Kuijp, The Tibetan Script and Derivatives, in Daniels and Bright, The World's Writing Systems, 1996.
Info: Wikipedia Source

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