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Sundanese script (su: Aksara Sunda) is a writing system which is currently used by some Sundanese people. It is built based on Old Sundanese script (su Aksara Sunda Kuna) which was used by ancient Sundanese between 14th and 18th centuries.
[edit] History & StandardizationSince Sundanese people has utilized many different scripts, there were several requirements considered in the standardization of Sundaneses script for modern usage: (a) a script that can record Sundanese language; (b) period of usage; (c) area of usage; (d) simplicity, easy to use; (e) shows Sundanese identity. The Government of West Java Province has announced Peraturan Daerah (Local Regulation) No. 6 1996 about Sundanese Language, Literature, and Script. The regulation was motivated by Keputusan Presiden (President's Decision) No. 082/B/1991, 24 Juli 1991. As follow up to the local regulation, on Tuesday, 21 October 1997 in the main hall of Japanese Language Study Centre, Universitas Padjadjaran, Jatinangor; a seminar entitled "Lokakarya Aksara Sunda", under cooperation between the Government of West Java Province and Faculty of Literature Universitas Padjadjaran, was held and attended by delegations from local communities- or cities in West Java. Several discussion results were achieved:
Next, the existence and function of Sundanese Script in the social and cultural life of West Javanese people in modern life is supported by the West Javanese Governor's Decision No. 434/SK.614-Dis.PK/99 about "Standardization of Sundanese Script", Local Government's Regulation No. 5 2003 about "Conservation of Local Language, Literature, and Script", and Governor's Decision No. 3 2004. [edit] Typology
The standardized script has 32 basic characters, consists of 7 (seven) aksara Swara (independent vowels): a, é, i, o, u, e, and eu, and 23 aksara Ngalagena (consonants with vowel a): ka-ga-nga, ca-ja-nya, ta-da-na, pa-ba-ma, ya-ra-la, wa-sa-ha, fa-va-qa-xa-za). The additional five sounds to the Ngalagena characters were added to fulfill the purpose of Sundanese script as tool for recording the development of Sundanese language, especially by absorption of foreign words and sounds. However, the glyphs for the new characters are not new, but reusing several variants in old Sundanese script, for example: the glyphs for fa and va are variants of Old Sundanese pa, the glyphs for qa and xa are variants of Old Sundanese ka, and the glyph for za is a variant of Old Sundanese ja. There are two non-standard sound kha and sya for writing foreign Arabic consonants 'خ' and 'ش'. These are considered non-standard because their usage only supported by few Sundanese people. There are also rarangkéns or attachments for removing, modifying, or adding vowel or consonant sound to the base characters. 13 rarangkéns based on the position to the base can be categorized into three groups: (1) five rarangkéns above the base characters, (2) three rarangkéns below the base characters, and (3) five rarangkéns inline the base characters. In addition, there are glyphs for number characters, from zero to nine. Graphically, Ngalagena characters including rarangkéns have angle 45° – 75°. In general, the dimension ratio (height:width) is 4:4, except for the Ngalagena character ra (4:3), ba and nya (4:6), and the Swara character i (4:3). Rarangkéns have dimension ratio 2:2, except for panyecek (1:1), panglayar (4:2), panyakra (2:4), pamaéh (4:2) and pamingkal (2:4 bottom-side, 3:2 right-side). Numbers have ratio 4:4, except for number 4 and 5 (4:3). [edit] Aksara Swara
[edit] Aksara NgalagenaAksara Ngalagena from Sundanese language
Aksara Ngalagena for writing foreign words
[edit] RarangkénBased on their location to the base glyph, 14 rarangkén can be categorized as:
a. Rarangkéns above the base glyph
b. Rarangkéns below the base glyph
c. Rarangkéns inline the base glyph
[edit] Numbers
In texts, numbers are written surrounded with dual pipe sign | ... |. Example: |᮲᮰᮰᮸| = 2008 [edit] PunctuationsFor modern use, Latin punctuations are used. Such punctuations are: comma, dot, semicolon, colon, exclamation mark, question mark, quotes, parenthesis, bracket etc. [edit] Writing in Pasangan (Pairs)Simple words or sentences can be written directly, for example by arranging Ngalagena letters which represent the sounds. However, in certain words, compound consonants can be found. Then, two ways of writing can be used: (1) using pamaéh, or (2) using pasangan (pairs). The use of pamaéh is one way to write Sundanese script at basic stage. Another way, the pasangan, is normally used in order to avoid the use of pamaéh in the middle of words, as well as to save writing space. Pasangan is constructed by attaching second Ngalagena letter to the first one, thus eliminate the /a/ voice of the first Ngalagena. [edit] Sundanese in UnicodeThe Unicode range for Sundanese is U+1B80 – U+1BBF. Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points as per Unicode 5.1.0. Future Unicode is expected to code remaining characters of Old Sundanese script and pasangan writing technique.
[edit] See also[edit] References
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