Quote of the Day
Dec. 28th, 2016 09:34 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Several of the Phoenician consonants encoded sounds not used in Greek, and at some point an unknown genius took a momentous step: he or she converted these unneeded letters into vowels. The new Greek vowels eliminated nearly all the ambiguity of a consonant-only script and thus enabled mastery of the alphabet by children as young as five or six.
- William J. Bernstein. Masters of the Word (2014).
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An alphabet with vowels is more "free monoidable" than one without them.