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{{for|Glyphs}}
 
{{for|Glyphs}}
   
βˆ’
Glyphs are a pseudo-logographic script primarily used among Alethi men. They are made up of various phonetic radicals descended from Dawnchant script, with the phonemes flipped or distorted to fit the shape of the glyph.{{book ref|sa3|i|2}}{{file ref|Alethi Glyphs Page 1.jpg|Alethi Glyphs: Page 1}} Over time, glyphs change in shape and lose the phonetic information coded into them, leaving them as logographs.{{file ref|Alethi Glyphs Page 1.jpg|Alethi Glyphs: Page 1}} However, it is possible to still read the phonemes if one knows what one is looking for.{{book ref|twok|27}}
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Glyphs are a pseudo-logographic script primarily used among Alethi men. They are made up of various phonetic glyphs descended from Dawnchant script, with the phonemes flipped or distorted to fit the shape of the glyph.{{book ref|sa3|i|2}}{{file ref|Alethi Glyphs Page 1.jpg|Alethi Glyphs: Page 1}} Over time, glyphs change in shape and lose the phonetic information coded into them, leaving them as logographs.{{file ref|Alethi Glyphs Page 1.jpg|Alethi Glyphs: Page 1}} However, it is possible to still read the phonemes if one knows what one is looking for.{{book ref|twok|27}}
   
 
The creation of new glyphs makes use of these phonemes. It takes a trained calligrapher, with a deep knowledge of how how the glyph may be expressed without overly obscuring the meaning, in order to make new glyphs.{{wob ref|6461}} Glyphs are made into bilaterally symmetric pictographs, so that they can be read by the illiterate, and ultimately act as a logography.{{book ref|twok|3}}{{file ref|Alethi Glyphs Page 1.jpg|Alethi Glyphs: Page 1}} For example, the glyph for [[Zatalef|zatalef]] is shaped like a zatalef, so that it can be understood even without reading the phonemic components.{{file ref|Alethi Glyphs Page 1.jpg|Alethi Glyphs: Page 1}}
 
The creation of new glyphs makes use of these phonemes. It takes a trained calligrapher, with a deep knowledge of how how the glyph may be expressed without overly obscuring the meaning, in order to make new glyphs.{{wob ref|6461}} Glyphs are made into bilaterally symmetric pictographs, so that they can be read by the illiterate, and ultimately act as a logography.{{book ref|twok|3}}{{file ref|Alethi Glyphs Page 1.jpg|Alethi Glyphs: Page 1}} For example, the glyph for [[Zatalef|zatalef]] is shaped like a zatalef, so that it can be understood even without reading the phonemic components.{{file ref|Alethi Glyphs Page 1.jpg|Alethi Glyphs: Page 1}}

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