Thoth's Pill - an Animated History of Writing
Автор: NativLang
Загружено: 2015-11-06
Просмотров: 1241803
My animation takes you through the birth and evolution of writing. Watch the story of the world's scripts unfold, from the early cave days to modern writing systems. But only if you choose to take Thoth's Pill...
This animated documentary is my vision of the history of writing if you could've seen it evolve with your own eyes. It was a time-consuming labor of love in honor of written language, a topic I've been passionate about for years.
** CORRECTIONS **
(Hugs to the commenters who took time to point all of these out on specific videos in the series.)
CHINESE #1
The two bottom "yue" examples use simplified characters, one of which ("key") has the more common reading "yao". This means that the characters didn't evolve in ancient times according to the traditional pattern presented here, but were made to look similar later in history. To find accurate examples, rewind to our character "ma" ("horse"). Better yet, use an online Hànzì dictionary to see each component of a specific character:
http://cojak.org/
CHINESE #2
The character for "ant" is cited as a prefix with the more general meaning "insect".
ETHIOPIAN (GE'EZ)
In standard transliteration, mä, bä and lä rather than ma, ba and la.
KOREAN
I swapped the shape keys for 'p' and 'm'. Annotations should pop up to correct this unless you're watching on mobile.
쓰기 instead of 쯔기 on the capsule at 3:20, mentioned by FredRick010 on reddit and also by multiple commenters.
Meet these scripts:
Egyptian hieroglyphs
Sumerian cuneiform
Aztec glyphs
Chinese characters (Hanzi)
Maya glyphs
Phoenician abjad (consonant alphabet)
Greek alphabet
Roman alphabet
Arabic, Syriac and Hebrew consonant alphabets
Brahmic scripts, including Devanagari
Ge'ez abugida
Korean hangul and hanja
Japanese kana and kanji
See these developments in the history of writing:
pictographs (pictograms)
ideographs
metonymy
logographs (logograms)
rebus writing
determinatives and radicals
syllabaries
phonetic complements
acrophony
abjads
alphabets
matres lectionis
vowel pointing
alphasyllabaries
abugidas
featural alphabets
~ Who's to thank or blame? ~
Mostly me, plus some CC-BY and public domain stuff.
CREDITS:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1z...
Also, Thamus' opening speech is my translation of Plato's Phaedrus 274e-275a.
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