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  • I am not a linguist! I am a silly teenager who makes silly youtube videos and reads a

  • lot of Wikipeda.

  • OK, now that we're past that, isn't the latin alphabet cool? And by cool I mean everywhere?

  • If you live anywhere that at some point in history has been dominated by western europeans,

  • which is to say almost everywhere, you probably don't even think of it as the latin alphabet,

  • it's probably just "writing" to you, unless you're weird like I am, or like you're about

  • to be because you will have watched this video. But at some point very early on in most of

  • our lives, like, when we're in grade school, there is a period when we're like "why is

  • there a letter for X? Couldn't we just represent that with a ks?" and "why should we have the

  • letter c? Aren't it's sounds already covered by s and k?". Well, prepare to have you questions

  • answered in this video, where I explain the bizarre and arbitrary history of all of the

  • letters in the English language, in order of least interesting to most interesting.

  • Now, the ones with the simplest stories are these guys. Their evolution was relatively

  • straightforward. See, you know how the ancient Sumerians invented writing? Well, you do now,

  • but just because they did it first doesn't mean everyone else learned how from them.

  • The ancient Egyptians actually came up with a completely different system of writing all

  • on their own, and Egyptian hieroglyphs evolved into a writing system called Phoenician. Probably?

  • Maybe? Either way, we're fairly certain that the look of the Phoenician letters was actually

  • based off Phoenician words that started with that sound. This represented a goad, which

  • was a thing you farmed with. This is a person's head. This is a . . . mouth?! This is supposed

  • to be a tooth? Look, they simplified them a lot, just go with it.

  • Now, at this point you might be asking, what on earth does this have to do with the letters

  • B, K, S, D, Z, L, M, N, P, T and R? Well, while we're not sure about the link between

  • Egyptian and Phoenician, we are quite sure that the Greeks learned how to write from

  • the Phoenicians, the Romans learned how to write from the Greeks and the English learned

  • how to write from the Romans. Mostly, kind of, anyway, at each transition here a lot

  • of the letters changed a little bit, including these. This is how B changed, here's K, here's

  • S, D, Z, L, M, N, P, T and R. Think that was complicated? Wait till we get to some of these

  • others.

  • The letter X is also relatively simple. See, the greeks had this letter for a K sound and

  • this letter for a s sound, and when they wrote them for some reason they decided to just

  • leave off the second one. So then when the Romans learned to write from the Greeks, the

  • romans were like wait, so what does that letter represent? Oh, that makes a ks sound. So you

  • guys have a letter for two sounds? Well, kind of, I guess, Oh, and the Romans rolled with

  • it.

  • Now let's talk about the vowels. See, the ancient Phoenicians didn't write vowels. Now,

  • this is that part where you go WHAAT? How did they write without vowels? What do you

  • even mean? If the words pat, pot, pate, pet, peat, pit and put were all spelled pt, then

  • how would you know which one I was referring to? Well, the answer is that the Phoenicians

  • didn't really have many groups of words like that in there language. Even though if we

  • tried to write like that in English it wouldn't work out very well, because of the way the

  • Semitic languages work grammatically writing in all consonants worked just fine for them.

  • The same, however, could not be said for the Greeks. The Greeks were like us. They needed

  • vowels. Luckily, this weird thing happened. See, the Phoenician alphabet was said to have

  • been brought to Greece by I guy named Cadmus, who was like, "OK, guys, the name of each

  • letter starts with the sound that the letter represents, for instance, this is "bet" it

  • makes a "b" sound. This is "Gaml," it makes a "G" sound." "OK Cadmus, so what about this

  • one?" "Oh, that? It's called "Alf." Now, the sound Cadmus was pronouncing was called a

  • glottal stop, a sound that you make by closing off you're glottis and that we make all the

  • time subconsciously and that it's really hard for us to even notice. Similarly, the Greeks

  • couldn't hear the glottal stop at the beginning of "Alf," so they just assumed that it made

  • an "ah" sound. That happened with a bunch of other weird, pharyngal Semitic sounds,

  • where the name of the letter was supposed to be pronounced with a consonant but the

  • Greeks couldn't hear the consonant so they just make the letter represent the first vowel

  • of the word. Or at least, that's the way it worked for

  • three of them. See, one of the weird semitic Phoenician sounds was pronounced "H", and

  • it was completely separate from the normal H "h" sound. So Cadmus was like "OK, this

  • letter is Het and this letter is he" and the greeks looked at each other and were like

  • "they both sound like huh sounds only one's weird." "It sounds like he's really emphasizing

  • the Het one. Maybe he means that the one that's less breathy actually starts with a vowel?"

  • "What ever. Let's go with that." So the h letter became an e letter and the H letter

  • became a h letter. We'll get to these two latter, they'r more interesting.

  • Now that we've covered the vowels I can talk about the letter J, which evolved from the

  • letter I. Why would a letter that makes a J sound evolve from a letter that makes an

  • I sound? Well, the french used to just have the letter I, but then they started pronouncing

  • a lot of their I sounds as J sounds for some reason. They wanted to distinguish between

  • these two sounds in their writing, so they made up the letter J.

  • OK, now I'll cover these letters. The greeks had this one letter that made what's called

  • a close-front rounded vowel, or basically and ee sound but if you pursed you lips like

  • when you pronounce oo. So I think it would be roughly like y. The romans heard this and

  • thought it sounded basically like a oo sound, so they chopped off the bottom stem and made

  • it into their letter for the oo sound. Now, the greeks had modified their letter for oo

  • to represent the oo sound's more consonantly cousin, the w sound, and they made it into

  • the letter ef. The romans didn't have a wa sound, or, at least they didn't distinguish

  • it from their oo sound, so they used that letter for a sound they had but the Greeks

  • didn't the F sound. And everything was hunky-dory, until about

  • the first century BC when the Romans started taking over Greece along with the rest of

  • Europe and they dug up all these writings from cool greek dudes like plato and aristotle

  • and Homer and they started transliterating a lot of greek names and stuff into Latin,

  • and when they did this they decided to keep names that had the letter y in it as a y.

  • Later, when the English adopted the Roman alphabet, they would use the letter Y to do

  • the same thing the greeks did with it: to represent the weird eeoo sound. But why, you

  • ask. English doesn't have a eeoo sound. Well, it used to, until we started pronouncing it

  • like a y or a I or a ee sound instead. So, back to rome. They had a letter for oo

  • and w, one for f and one for transliterating greek words and everything was fine, but then

  • the romans started pronouncing some their words that had w sounds in them as v sounds,

  • so they made up this variant of the oo letter for their new v sound.

  • So everything was fine until they wanted to represent English with these letters, and

  • the English wanted a letter to represent their w sound, unlike the romans who were content

  • with using the same letter for oo w. So they stuck two Us together and called it the double-you

  • and used it to represent the w sound. So we have Five letters in modern English that come

  • from this one greek letter.

  • Now for these letters. You know how I've been talking about how the Roman's learned how

  • to write from the Greeks? Well, that's partially true. See, the Romans learned how to write

  • from two people, the Greeks and these guys called Etruscans, who lived just north of

  • them. The Etruscans themselves learned from the Greeks, so mostly I just ignore them,

  • but here, when dealing with the letters C, Q and G they're important. The Phoenicians

  • had these three letters, one for their k sound, one for their s sound, and one for their weird

  • semitic q sound. This was all well and good until the Greeks took all three of these letters

  • even though they had no q sound, because they had assigned each letter a number and started

  • doing math with them because they hadn't adopted arabic numerals yet and gosh darn it they

  • needed some symbols to do math with and if they just dropped the weird proto-q letter

  • they wouldn't have a number ninety. So then when the Etruscans, who not only didn't have

  • a q sound but they didn't have a g sound either, learned how to write, they did the smart thing

  • and only took one letter to represent their one sound. Except they couldn't hear the difference

  • between k and g so they just took the one that looked cooler.

  • This was fine until the Romans, who did have both a K and a G sound, learned to write from

  • the Etruscans. They needed to distinguish between k and g and they only had one letter

  • for the both of them, so they split the letter C into two letters, the letter C and the letter

  • G, one to make a k sound and the other to make a g sound. They also, for really no apparent

  • reason, took the the letter q from the Greeks and used it to make a kw sound, even though

  • they already had a k and a w letter. And then the Romans started transliterating

  • Greek stuff, and, like with the letter Y, they introduced a whole new letter to represent

  • the old greek names: the letter k. So now the romans had two different letters for k

  • sounds, and then when we adopted the Latin alphabet we took both letters for our k sound.

  • Now, that explains why we have two letters for the k sound, but it doesn't explain why

  • we pronounce the letter c as a "s" sometimes. Well, that's just because of random changes

  • in pronunciation in English that's caused us to pronounce some "k" sounds as "s" sounds.

  • So that's why the alphabet is the way it is. It's kind of annoying in how ridiculously

  • arbitrary it is, but for the same reason it's kind of beautiful. This writing system and

  • these letters that surround us everywhere in life are the result of historical events

  • that happened thousands of years ago. This is why I love linguistics. It reveals that

  • facets of the language that surrounds me, even if they seem arbitrary and needlessly

  • complicated, actually connect me to an ancient, three-thousand year old tradition. Once I

  • realized that, I felt like I was living in the ruins of an ancient civilization, with

  • shadows and phantoms of people and events that existed millennia ago constantly dancing

  • around me. Still think it's stupid and arbitrary? Well, welcome to the club.

I am not a linguist! I am a silly teenager who makes silly youtube videos and reads a

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英字史 (A History of English Letters)

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    He Jiun Tseng に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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