10 Facts About Manchu alphabet

1.

Manchu alphabet is the alphabet used to write the now nearly-extinct Manchu language.

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2.

Manchu alphabet decried the fact that while illiterate Han Chinese and Mongolians could understand their respective languages when read aloud, that was not the case for the Manchus, whose documents were recorded by Mongolian scribes.

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3.

Recently discovered manuscripts from the 1620s make clear that the addition of dots and circles to Manchu alphabet script began before their supposed introduction by Dahai.

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4.

Dahai added the tulergi hergen : ten graphemes to facilitate Manchu alphabet to be used to write Chinese, Sanskrit, and Tibetan loanwords.

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5.

Several Chinese-Manchu alphabet dictionaries contain Chinese characters transliterated with Manchu alphabet script.

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6.

Manchu alphabet children were taught to memorize the shapes of all the syllables in the language separately as they learned to write and say right away "la, lo", etc.

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7.

In China, it is considered syllabic, and Manchu is still taught in this manner, while in the West it is treated like an alphabet.

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8.

Syllables in Manchu alphabet are divided into twelve categories called uju based on their syllabic codas .

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9.

Manchu alphabet has two kinds of punctuation: two dots, analogous to a period; and one dot, analogous to a comma.

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10.

However, with the exception of lists of nouns being reliably punctuated by single dots, punctuation in Manchu alphabet is inconsistent, and therefore not of much use as an aid to readability.

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