"The Wonderful World Of The Alphabet"
Prior to reading David Sacks'reference book it never dawned
on me just how intriguing are the letters of our alphabet.
As Sacks points out, these twenty- six letters all have
personalities of their own.
Combining his knowledge of history, linguistics,
geography, literature, phonetics and other disciplines,
readers are taken on a wonderful journey of discovery from
ancient Egypt in the year 2000 B.C., when the alphabet was
believed to have originated, up to the present. Dividing the book into twenty- six chapters, the author
illustrates the principal significance of each letter of
the alphabet or as Sacks terms it- "its personality, as
expressed through speech or visual media."
As an example, if we look at the chapter pertaining to
the letter "F," we notice that it has been saddled with an
obscenity or it can be comical just in itself. Another
element of its personality is that this letter, and not
the letter "E" that precedes it, has very often been
associated with failure. If we contrast the personalities of "F" with "A," we
recognize how the first letter of the alphabet is
associated with beginnings, fundamentals, and superiority.
Sacks tells us that this letter has traveled first class
throughout history. In fact, most alphabets start with "A"
or its near equivalent. The Phoenicians, around 1000 B.C.,
named "A" the first letter of their alphabet and the
Greeks followed around 800 B.C.
Today, it is commonly associated with excellence
pertaining to products such as meat, success at school,
grading of bonds, stocks, and other credit obligations, as
well as top service. We are informed that an alphabet is a writing system based
on letters, which by definition symbolize phonemes only.
A phoneme is the smallest phonetic unit in a language
capable of conveying a distinction in meaning. Letters are
used in combination to show words of a particular language
that a writer shares with the reader. We must have enough
letters with the right and essential sounds to adequately
represent a particular language. Surprisingly, the number
of letters needed is relatively small, "fewer than 30 for
most languages." What is noteworthy is that alphabets have been quite
adaptable throughout history and have jumped from language
to language across all kinds of barriers. If we look at
our own Roman alphabet in English we notice that it is the
product of four such leaps. It was initially copied from
Phoenician letters by the Greeks who in turn had their
letters copied by the Etruscans of Italy around 700 B.C.
All three of these languages were quite different,
nevertheless the letters were able to adapt. When the
Romans came along, they copied the letters from the
Etruscans, and as they conquered Italy and lands beyond
they brought with them the Roman alphabet. "Roman letters
were fitted to newer tongues, including primitive English
(around A.D. 600). Today those letters have grown up to
become our own." These are some of the many revelations exposed in this
thought provoking reference book wherein readers are
apprised of how languages and their letters interact and
change over time. Sack's enthusiasm and sense of wonder for one of the
world's great inventions is contagious, and once you start
reading about this fascinating topic you become addicted
to it.
His knowledge and unbelievable comprehensive research
imbue this book with a great deal of revelations seducing
the reader to continually return to its pages for another
morsel of information. It is to be noted that the original hardcover edition was
entitled Language Visible: Unraveling the Mystery of our
Alphabet from A to Z.
Reviewed by Norman Goldman
Courtesy Bookpleasures
Posted August 15, 2004
SummaryLetters are tangible language. Joining together in endless
combinations to actually show speech, letters convey our
messages and tell our stories. While we encounter these
tiny shapes hundreds of times a day, we take for granted
the long, fascinating history behind one of the most
fundamental of human inventions -- the alphabet.
The heart of the book is the 26 fact-filled "biographies"
of letters A through Z, each one identifying the letter's
particular significance for modern readers, tracing its
development from ancient forms, and discussing its
noteworthy role in literature and other media. We learn,
for example, why the letter X has a sinister and sexual
aura, how B came to signify second best, why the
word "mother" in many languages starts with M, and what is
the story of O.
Packed with information and lavishly illustrated, Language
Visible is not only accessible and entertaining, but
essential to the appreciation of our own language.
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