Armenian Alphabet Article Index for
Armenian
Website Links For
Armenian
 

Information About

Armenian Alphabet




The Armenian alphabet is an Alphabet used for writing the Armenian Language , created by Saint Mesrop Mashtots in AD 405 .

The Armenian alphabet is one of six European alphabetic scripts identified in the Unicode standard (see Unicode Code Charts and Unicode Standard, Chapter 7 ).

Various scripts have been credited with being the prototype for the Armenian alphabet, including Pahlavi , Syriac , and Phoenician . However, the order of the letters, the use of the Digraph ''ou'' for the vowel , and a noticeable similarity of letter forms to cursive Greek suggests that it was likely based on the Greek Alphabet .

As Petross Ter Matossian from Columbia University informs, for about 250 years, from the early 18th Century until around 1950 , more than 2000 books were printed in the Turkish Language using letters of the Armenian alphabet. Not only Armenians read Armeno-Turkish, but also the non-Armenian (including the Ottoman Turkish) elite. The Armenian alphabet was also used alongside the Arabic alphabet on official documents of the Ottoman Empire, but was written in the Ottoman Language . For instance, the first Novel to be written in the Ottoman Empire was 1851's ''Akabi'', written in the Armenian script by Hovsep Vartan. Also, when the Armenian Duzoglu family managed the Ottoman mint during the reign of Abdulmejid, they kept records in the Armenian script, but Turkish language.

Armenian has two different dialects: Eastern and Western. Both use the same alphabet, however some of the letters have different names and pronunciations. For example, the second letter in Eastern Armenian is "ben" and makes a 'b' sound while in Western Armenian, the second letter is "pen" and makes a 'p' sound.

Some letters also make different sounds depending on their placement within a word. For example, the letter vo () makes a 'v' sound at the beginning of a word, but an 'o' sound in the middle. The letter hyoon () can make an 'h' sound at the beginning of a word, but is also combined with other letters to form a Digraph , such as the above mentioned combination of to make the 'oo' or 'ou' sound.
The chart below gives the transliteration for the initial sound produced by each letter




SEE ALSO



EXTERNAL LINKS

  • theiling.de : Learn the Armenian alphabet online

  • stnersess.edu : Bedross Der Matossian on the use of Armeno-Turkish

  • Unicode Support for Armenian