logging in or signing up Written Language woop235 Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 125 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: May 04, 2010 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... By: khalidemmanuel (25 month(s) ago) please send this presentation on khalidemmanuel777@gmail.com Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close Premium member Presentation Transcript Written Language: Pictures to the Alphabet : Written Language: Pictures to the Alphabet Claudetta Estes RDG 511 Slide 2: “Written language develops when oral language is insufficient for meeting language needs of a society” ~Ken Goodman Why Written Language? : Why Written Language? Even societies that appear to have no written language use symbols or graphics in order to communicate. Written language becomes necessary, however when societies and their cultures spread out and develop in complex ways. (Goodman) When a culture needs a written language they simply invent it in order to communicate. Communication in Society Mesopotamia : Around 3000 B.C.E. language was found Land lies along the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. This area today is now modern Iraq. Early Mesopotamian writing was found in trade, business and farm records. Mesopotamia traded regularly with ancient Egyptian and ancient Indian civilizations, thus having the idea of writing spread into other cultures. Mesopotamia The first written language? Pictograms and ideograms : 20,000 years ago. These drawings and paintings developed later into "pictograms". These paintings depicted literal portrayals of various aspects of life. Pictograms gradually developed into "ideograms”. They represented ideas rather than objects. Ideograms might include a picture of the sun to represent heat, light and daytime. Ideograms became more abstract and eventually began to represent the sounds of spoken language Pictograms and ideograms Pictures that evolved.. Pictograms in Mainstream Culture : Pictograms in Mainstream Culture Hospital, Airport… A form of pictograms can also be found in mainstream cultures as road signs, on public bathroom doors, and used to represent a place to eat, to sleep, to fill your gas tank, or make a phone call. These symbols are internationally recognizable, producing meaning that might not be expressible in spoken language. Cuneiform Writing : Cuneiform Writing Mesopotamia’s Written Language This literally meant "wedged shape". They pressed a wedged shape object in clay tablets. Each of these abstract symbols represented a single word. Hieroglyphics : The Egyptians had developed a writing system similar to the Sumerians called "hieroglyphics". Hieroglyphics were also pictographic. It came to represent syllables, and the sounds of language. Around 1500 B.C. the Phoenicians of the eastern shores of the Mediterranean adopted the Egyptian hieroglyphics and developed them into a set of 22 consonant vowel pairs. This syllabic system was later used by the Greeks. Hieroglyphics Egypt's Language Logographic System : Logographic System Writing for different cultures – Three Writing Systems Logographic system is a word writing system. An idea of this system is single characters represent single words. The problem with this system is that thousands of symbols must be memorized. In recent years the Chinese government has adopted a spelling system using the Roman alphabet, called "Pinyin". Pinyin can be used to teach the intensive logographic system. It is used to help foreigners, often found on street signs and other forms of instruction. Syllabic System : A syllabic system is a syllable writing system that is used in Japan. They have two systems. One, called "kana", is made up of two 46 characters syllabaries, "katakana" and "hiragana”. The first represents syllables and the second represents inflections. The Japanese language can be represented with kana. All words can be represented in kana, and many of those can also be represented in kanji. Other syllabic writing systems are used by the Cherokee people. There writing system was developed relatively recently in 1821. Syllabic System Writing for different cultures – Three Writing Systems Alphabetic System : The alphabetic system is a sound writing system common to most modern cultures. Though alphabetic systems can appear quite different from each other, they all have a common letter to sound correspondence. Most alphabetic systems do not represent every sound with a different letter. The United States uses an alphabetic system to produce written language. Alphabetic System Writing for different cultures – Three Writing Systems Conclusion : “Language is a living, dynamic organism” (Goodman). We us all forms of communication in order to communicate. Language is the most important idea in reading and making sense of our world. Conclusion Written Language Importance You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
Written Language woop235 Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 125 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: May 04, 2010 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... By: khalidemmanuel (25 month(s) ago) please send this presentation on khalidemmanuel777@gmail.com Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close Premium member Presentation Transcript Written Language: Pictures to the Alphabet : Written Language: Pictures to the Alphabet Claudetta Estes RDG 511 Slide 2: “Written language develops when oral language is insufficient for meeting language needs of a society” ~Ken Goodman Why Written Language? : Why Written Language? Even societies that appear to have no written language use symbols or graphics in order to communicate. Written language becomes necessary, however when societies and their cultures spread out and develop in complex ways. (Goodman) When a culture needs a written language they simply invent it in order to communicate. Communication in Society Mesopotamia : Around 3000 B.C.E. language was found Land lies along the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. This area today is now modern Iraq. Early Mesopotamian writing was found in trade, business and farm records. Mesopotamia traded regularly with ancient Egyptian and ancient Indian civilizations, thus having the idea of writing spread into other cultures. Mesopotamia The first written language? Pictograms and ideograms : 20,000 years ago. These drawings and paintings developed later into "pictograms". These paintings depicted literal portrayals of various aspects of life. Pictograms gradually developed into "ideograms”. They represented ideas rather than objects. Ideograms might include a picture of the sun to represent heat, light and daytime. Ideograms became more abstract and eventually began to represent the sounds of spoken language Pictograms and ideograms Pictures that evolved.. Pictograms in Mainstream Culture : Pictograms in Mainstream Culture Hospital, Airport… A form of pictograms can also be found in mainstream cultures as road signs, on public bathroom doors, and used to represent a place to eat, to sleep, to fill your gas tank, or make a phone call. These symbols are internationally recognizable, producing meaning that might not be expressible in spoken language. Cuneiform Writing : Cuneiform Writing Mesopotamia’s Written Language This literally meant "wedged shape". They pressed a wedged shape object in clay tablets. Each of these abstract symbols represented a single word. Hieroglyphics : The Egyptians had developed a writing system similar to the Sumerians called "hieroglyphics". Hieroglyphics were also pictographic. It came to represent syllables, and the sounds of language. Around 1500 B.C. the Phoenicians of the eastern shores of the Mediterranean adopted the Egyptian hieroglyphics and developed them into a set of 22 consonant vowel pairs. This syllabic system was later used by the Greeks. Hieroglyphics Egypt's Language Logographic System : Logographic System Writing for different cultures – Three Writing Systems Logographic system is a word writing system. An idea of this system is single characters represent single words. The problem with this system is that thousands of symbols must be memorized. In recent years the Chinese government has adopted a spelling system using the Roman alphabet, called "Pinyin". Pinyin can be used to teach the intensive logographic system. It is used to help foreigners, often found on street signs and other forms of instruction. Syllabic System : A syllabic system is a syllable writing system that is used in Japan. They have two systems. One, called "kana", is made up of two 46 characters syllabaries, "katakana" and "hiragana”. The first represents syllables and the second represents inflections. The Japanese language can be represented with kana. All words can be represented in kana, and many of those can also be represented in kanji. Other syllabic writing systems are used by the Cherokee people. There writing system was developed relatively recently in 1821. Syllabic System Writing for different cultures – Three Writing Systems Alphabetic System : The alphabetic system is a sound writing system common to most modern cultures. Though alphabetic systems can appear quite different from each other, they all have a common letter to sound correspondence. Most alphabetic systems do not represent every sound with a different letter. The United States uses an alphabetic system to produce written language. Alphabetic System Writing for different cultures – Three Writing Systems Conclusion : “Language is a living, dynamic organism” (Goodman). We us all forms of communication in order to communicate. Language is the most important idea in reading and making sense of our world. Conclusion Written Language Importance