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Tagbanwa script
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{{Short description|Native writing system of Tagbanwa languages and other indigenous languages of Palawan}} {{Contains special characters | special = uncommon [[Unicode]] characters | fix = Help:Multilingual support | image = Replacement character.svg | link = Specials (Unicode block)#Replacement character | alt = <?> | compact = yes }}'''Tagbanwa''' is one of the scripts [[Suyat|indigenous to the Philippines]], used by the [[Tagbanwa]] and the [[Palawan people]] as their ethnic writing system.<ref name=miller/>{{Infobox writing system | name = Tagbanwa script | altname = {{script|Tagb|ᝦᝪᝯ}} | type = [[Abugida]] | region = [[Palawan Island]] | languages = [[Palawanic languages]] | fam1 = [[Proto-Sinaitic script]][a] | footnotes = | fam2 = [[Phoenician alphabet]] | fam3 = [[Aramaic alphabet]] | fam4 = [[Brahmi script]] | fam5 = [[Pallava script]] | fam6 = [[Kawi script]] | fam7 = [[Baybayin]] | sisters = ;In the Philippines *[[Baybayin]] *[[Buhid script]] *[[Hanunó'o script]] *[[Kulitan]] ;In Indonesian Archipelago: *[[Balinese script|Balinese]] *[[Batak script|Batak]] *[[Javanese script|Javanese]] *[[Lontara script|Lontara]] *[[Sundanese script|Sundanese]] *[[Rencong script|Rencong]] *[[Rejang script|Rejang]] *[[Bima Script|Bima]] *[[Makasar script|Makasar]] | time = {{circa|1300}}–present | unicode = [https://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U1760.pdf U+1760–U+177F] | iso15924 = Tagb | sample = Tagbanwa script sample.svg | imagesize = 200px | note = none }} {{brahmic}} The Tagbanwa languages ([[Aborlan Tagbanwa language|Aborlan]], [[Calamian Tagbanwa language|Calamian]] and [[Central Tagbanwa language|Central]]), which are [[Austronesian languages]] with about 8,000-25,000<ref name=ScriptSource>[https://scriptsource.org/cms/scripts/page.php?item_id=script_detail&key=Tagb.htm ScriptSource: Tagbanwa].</ref> total speakers in the central and northern regions of [[Palawan]], are dying out as the younger generations of Tagbanwa are learning and using non-traditional languages such as [[Cuyonon]] and [[Tagalog language|Tagalog]], thus becoming less knowledgeable of their own indigenous cultural heritage. There are proposals to revive the script by teaching it in public and private schools with Tagbanwa populations.<ref name="newsinfo">{{Cite news |last=Orejas |first=Tonette |date=2018-04-27 |title=Protect All PH Writing Systems, Heritage Advocates Urge Congress |language=en |work=Inquirer.net |url=https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/985669/protect-all-ph-writing-systems-heritage-advocates-urge-congress |access-date=2022-03-07}}</ref> ==Origin== The Tagbanwa script was used in the Philippines until the 17th century. Closely related to [[Baybayin]], it is believed to have come from the [[Kawi script]] of [[Java]], [[Bali]] and [[Sumatra]], which in turn, descended from the [[Pallava script]], one of the southern Indian scripts derived from [[Brāhmī script|Brahmi]].<ref name="omni">[http://www.omniglot.com/writing/tagbanwa.htm Omniglot: Tagbanwa]. Accessed October 13, 2016.</ref> ==Features== Tagbanwa is an alphasyllabary or [[abugida]] in which each letter represents a syllable consisting of a consonant and an inherent vowel /a/, a feature that it shares with many related scripts from SE Asia as they derive from variants of the [[Brahmi|Brahmic]] scripts of India. Similar to these scripts, vowels other than /a/ are indicated by the addition of a diacritic above (for /i/) or below (for /u/) the letter.<ref>{{cite web|first=Michael|last=Everson|author-link=Michael Everson|title=N1933 Revised proposal for encoding the Philippine scripts in the UCS|url=https://www.unicode.org/L2/L1999/n1933.pdf|date=1998-11-23}}</ref> Lone vowels are represented by their own, independent letters, thus /a/, /i/ and /u/ since there are only three. Syllables ending in a consonant are written without the final consonant.<ref name="UniStdIndonesiaAndOceania">{{cite web|url=https://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode13.0.0/ch17.pdf#G26723|title=Chapter 17: Indonesia and Oceania|publisher=Unicode Consortium|date=March 2020}}</ref> Tagbanwa is distinguished from [[Baybayin]] by the shapes of several letters, most notably ‹ka› and ‹wa› that are markedly different from other varieties.<ref name="miller">{{cite book |chapter=A Survey of Indigenous Scripts of Indonesia and the Philippines |title=2014 International Workshop on Endangered Scripts of Island Southeast Asia |chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/15915312 |access-date=20 April 2024|last1=Miller |first1=Christopher |date=2014}}</ref> Tagbanwa is traditionally written on bamboo in vertical columns from bottom to top and left to right. However, it is read from left to right in horizontal lines.<ref name="omni"/> {| class="wikitable plainheaders" |+ Tagbanwa syllables<ref name="UniStdIndonesiaAndOceania"/> |- !colspan = 2 | vowels !colspan = 17 | consonants |- | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝠ|note=a|s=Tagb}} | | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝣ|note=ka|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝤ|note=ga|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝥ|note=nga|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝦ|note=ta|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝧ|note=da|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝨ|note=na|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝩ|note=pa|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝪ|note=ba|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝫ|note=ma|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝬ|note=ya|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝮ|note=la|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝯ|note=wa|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝰ|note=sa|s=Tagb}} |- | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝡ|note=i|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch= ᝲ|note=i|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝣ + ᝲ|ch=ᝣᝲ|note=ki|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝤ+ ᝲ|ch=ᝤᝲ|note=gi|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝥ + ᝲ|ch=ᝥᝲ|note=ngi|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝦ + ᝲ|ch=ᝦᝲ|note=ti|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝧ + ᝲ|ch=ᝧᝲ|note=di|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝨ + ᝲ|ch=ᝨᝲ|note=ni|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝩ + ᝲ|ch=ᝩᝲ|note=pi|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝪ + ᝲ|ch=ᝪᝲ|note=bi|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝫ + ᝲ|ch=ᝫᝲ|note=mi|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝬ + ᝲ|ch=ᝬᝲ|note=yi|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝮ + ᝲ|ch=ᝮᝲ|note=li|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝯ + ᝲ|ch=ᝯᝲ|note=wi|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝰ + ᝲ|ch=ᝰᝲ|note=si|s=Tagb}} |- | {{letter|l=tgt|ch=ᝢ|note=u|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|ch= ᝳ|note=u|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝣ + ᝳ|ch=ᝣᝳ|note=ku|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝤ + ᝳ|ch=ᝤᝳ|note=gu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝥ + ᝳ|ch=ᝥᝳ|note=ngu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝦ + ᝳ|ch=ᝦᝳ|note=tu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝧ + ᝳ|ch=ᝧᝳ|note=du|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝨ + ᝳ|ch=ᝨᝳ|note=nu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝩ + ᝳ|ch=ᝩᝳ|note=pu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝪ + ᝳ|ch=ᝪᝳ|note=bu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝫ + ᝳ|ch=ᝫᝳ|note=mu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝬ + ᝳ|ch=ᝬᝳ|note=yu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝮ + ᝳ|ch=ᝮᝳ|note=lu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝯ + ᝳ|ch=ᝯᝳ|note=wu|s=Tagb}} | {{letter|l=tgt|tops=ᝰ + ᝳ|ch=ᝰᝳ|note=su|s=Tagb}} |} Tagbanwa writing makes use of single ({{script|Tagb|᜵}}) and double ({{script|Tagb|᜶}}) punctuation marks.<ref name="UniStdIndonesiaAndOceania"/> ==Ibalnan== [[File:Ibalnan.jpg|thumb|right|The Ibalnan alphabet]] [[File:Ibalnan script sample.png|thumb|Another sample of the Ibalnan script]] In the 20th century, this script was adopted from the Tagbanwa by the Palawan people further south in the [[Palawan|island]].<ref name=miller/> They call this alphabet '''Ibalnan''' and the vowel mark an ''ulit''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Palawano B Dictionary |url=https://www.webonary.org/palawanob/g4dd50244-515e-4393-81a0-ecc74944dd41/ |access-date=26 May 2020}}</ref> ==Unicode== {{Main|Tagbanwa (Unicode block)}} Tagbanwa script was added to the [[Unicode]] Standard in March, 2002 with the release of version 3.2. The Unicode block for Tagbanwa is U+1760–U+177F: {{Unicode chart Tagbanwa}} ==See also== *[[Suyat]] *[[Baybayin]] *[[Buhid script]] *[[Hanunó'o script]] *[[Kulitan (Kapampangan Writing Script)|Kulitan]] *[[Kawi script]] *[[Filipino orthography]] ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== *[https://web.archive.org/web/20080417200228/http://youpibouh.thefreecat.org/download/tagbanwa.htm Tagbanwa font by Samuel Thibault (2008)] *[https://notofonts.github.io/tagbanwa/ Noto Sans Tagbanwa] ([https://github.com/notofonts/tagbanwa Source on GitHub]) {{Kawi family}} {{Philippine scripts}} {{list of writing systems}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Tagbanwa Script}} [[Category:Philippine scripts]] [[Category:Brahmic scripts]] [[Category:Tagbanwa]] {{writingsystem-stub}}
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