Comparison Between Esperanto and Novial - Alphabet and Pronunciation

Alphabet and Pronunciation

Both Esperanto and Novial are written using versions of the Latin alphabet. The Esperanto alphabet has 28 letters: 22 without diacritics and 6 with diacritics unique to Esperanto: ĉ, ĝ, ĥ, ĵ, ŝ and ŭ. Novial uses the standard 26 letters of the Latin alphabet with no diacritics.

Esperanto
IPA
Novial
A, a
A, a
B, b
B, b
C, c
Ts, ts; S, s
Ĉ, ĉ
Ch, ch; Sh, sh
D, d
D, d
E, e
or
E, e
F, f
F, f
G, g
G, g
Ĝ, ĝ
J, j
H, h
H, h
Ĥ, ĥ
K, k
I, i
I, i
J, j
Y, y
Ĵ, ĵ
J, j
K, k
K, k
L, l
L, l
M, m
M, m
N, n
N, n
O, o
or
O, o
P, p
P, p
Kv kv
Qu, qu
R, r
R, r
S, s
S, s; Z, z
Ŝ, ŝ
Sh, sh; Ch, ch
T, t
T, t
U, u
U, u
Ŭ, ŭ
U, u (after a vowel)
V, v
V, v; W, w
Ks, ks; kz
,
X, x
Z, z
Z, z; S, s

In Esperanto one letter corresponds to one phoneme and one phoneme to one letter: there are no digraphs. Novial has 3 digraphs: ch, sh and qu; c and q are unique to these digraphs (except in foreign proper nouns) and permit no ambiguity; when s and h are separate phonemes this is indicated by separating with a hyphen: s-h. Novial permits some 2-vowel combinations to be pronounced either as 2 separate vowels or as diphthongs; for example, au, eu and oi may be pronounced as a + w, e + w and o + y, respectively, and ie, io and ia as y + e, y + o and y + a, respectively.

In handwriting neither Esperanto nor Novial presents any problem. However, the diacritics of Esperanto require special methods for typing and printing. The original method was a set of digraphs now known as the "h-system", but with the rise of computer word processing a so-called "x-system" has become equally popular. These systems are described in the article Esperanto orthography. However, with the advent of Unicode, the need for such work-arounds has lessened.

Read more about this topic:  Comparison Between Esperanto And Novial

Famous quotes containing the word alphabet:

    Roger Thornhill: You’re police, aren’t you. Or is it FBI?
    Professor: FBI, CIA, O–I—we’re all in the same alphabet soup.
    Ernest Lehman (b.1920)