Bassa-vah Alphabet
-
𖫐Bassa Vah Brief Enni
-
𖫑Bassa Vah Buchstabe Ka
-
𖫒Bassa Vah Buchstabe Se
-
𖫓Bassa Vah Brief Fa
-
𖫔Bassa Vah Buchstabe Mbe
-
𖫕Bassa Vah Brief Yie
-
𖫖Bassa Vah Buchstabe Gah
-
𖫗Bassa Vah Brief Dhii
-
𖫘Bassa Vah Buchstabe Kpah
-
𖫙Bassa Vah Brief Jo
-
𖫚Bassa Vah Brief Hwah
-
𖫛Bassa Vah Buchstabe Wa
-
𖫜Bassa Vah Buchstabe Zo
-
𖫝Bassa Vah Buchstabe Gbu
-
𖫞Bassa Vah Brief tun
-
𖫟Bassa Vah Brief Ce
-
𖫠Bassa Vah Buchstabe Uwu
-
𖫡Bassa Vah Brief an
-
𖫢Bassa Vah Buchstabe Ba
-
𖫣Bassa Vah Buchstabe Vu
-
𖫤Bassa Vah Buchstabe Yein
-
𖫥Bassa Vah Buchstabe Pa
-
𖫦Bassa Vah Brief Wadda
-
𖫧Bassa Vah Buchstabe A
-
𖫨Bassa Vah Buchstabe O
-
𖫩Bassa Vah Buchstabe Oo
-
𖫪Bassa Vah Buchstabe U
-
𖫫Bassa Vah Buchstabe Ee
-
𖫬Bassa Vah Buchstabe E
-
𖫭Bassa Vah Buchstabe I
-
𖫰Bassa Vah kombiniert hohen Ton
-
𖫱Bassa Vah, der niedrigen Ton kombiniert
-
𖫲Bassa Vah kombiniert den mittleren Ton
-
𖫳Bassa Vah Kombinierter Tief-Mittelton
-
𖫴Bassa Vah Kombinierter High-Low-Ton
-
𖫵Bassa Vah Vollendung
Beschreibung
The Bassa script, known as Bassa vah or simply vah (meaning 'throwing a sign' in Bassa), is an alphabetic script used for writing the Bassa language of Liberia. The Bassa language is a vocalic-consonantal language.
The origin of the script is unclear. It is believed that the Bassa people may have had their own script that was forgotten in Liberia but used by ex-slaves in Brazil and the West Indies. It was later reinvented or possibly created by Dr. Thomas Flo Lewis, although it is uncertain. The first book written using the Bassa script was printed in 1907.
However, over time, the use of the Bassa script declined, and it was eventually replaced with the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). 0070–02AF
-
A
-
B
-
C
-
D
-
E
-
F
-
G
-
H
-
I
-
J
-
K
-
L
-
M
-
N
-
O
-
P
-
R
-
S
-
T
-
U
-
V
-
W
-
Y
-
Ä