Product Details
Writing Systems of the World: Alphabets, Syllabaries, Pictograms

Writing Systems of the World: Alphabets, Syllabaries, Pictograms
By Akira Nakanishi

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #169598 in Books
  • Published on: 1998-01-09
  • Original language: Japanese
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 122 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
An examination of twenty-nine different scripts--plus examples of a hundred more--acts as a reference for travelers, stamp collectors, and calligraphers.


Customer Reviews

Languages excite5
I bought my own copy after finding one in the library. For anyone fascinated by languages, orgins, structure and everything that goes with it this is a great little book. The wealth of information will keep you regularly returning to it for snippets and what it contains would be great for words of wisdom for discussion at parties and other gatherings. I was disappointed that the useful world map in my copy is only black and white, the hardback version in the library was in colour, making it easier to see the divisions where each language is spoken. The other map in the library version showing the countries is missing completely, which is a shame, even if out of date it provides very valuable information. However the content of the book apart from that appears unchanged, and makes a very good one for your reference shelf alongside the encyclopaedias.

Fascinating, but unfortunately out of date with occasional innacuracies3
I enjoyed this book, it is interesting and easily accessible, it doesn't balther on with complex elaborations on relationships between languages, or the spread of the Phonecian based writing system, or baffle you really.

However it was copyrighterd in 1980, and its discriptions of the USSR and its languages (aswell as Yugoslavia) I for one can't help but feel that for a book that was printed in 1998, a slight update might have been in oreder.

Furthermore although languages and their relationships between each other are complex, I can't help but notice some mistakes when describing languages, for example Japanese is considered to be part of the Japanese-Ryukuan (or Japonic) linguistic family, not the Altaic (and the Japonic language family is in fact a family isolate, and only exists because elements of the Japanese language are now considered seperate languages instead of dialects, warranting the creation of a new language family. Similarly Basque is considered a language isolate, unrelated to any other, and most linguists view ideas of a genetic connection as unreliable at best, and incorrect at worst. Similarly describing French, Italian, Portugee and Spanish as Romance, rather than Italic language is much more useful for means of identification, since Romance is a more commonly used word (and the correctname for the Italic sub-group to which those languages belong).

However these are lesser points, the book is about writing systems afterall, and the book does indeed give concise descriptions and examples of those writing systems, would I recommend the book? Well I will read it, but I would prefer to get a more up-to-date book on the same subject.

That's why I have given this 3 stars...

Good Book!5
Very handy. Very fun. Comprehensive. Accurate. A must for all linguists/language students! (CONFESSION: I love the way this book smells!; literally!)