Do Western scripts have regional variants?
why does hanja look slightly more aesthetic than others? chu nom looks pretty cool too
>>78819065
Hmm Taiwan look the most like how Japanese kanji is written. (The only one with harai.) Does this mean anything?
Why do you paint little houses to each other
>>78819065
additional letters like Ö Ł Ñ
but its for languages not for regions
some languages use few scripts cyrillic/latin for example
>>78819065
Yep, we have some letters that others don't use, it's mainly accents in french (é, è, ë, ê, à, ù...)
each european language have its particularity.
>>78819188
does Corsicans of ex colonies use something what is different from the main french?
>>78819257
>of
or
Not quite but there's a few letters in the alphabet that only some languages use.
For example, Spanish doesn't natively have W and K, but we use them and have them in the alphabet because of loan words.
>>78819257
Corsican share some letters with french, but I think they miss some ë being the principal suspect here.
Ex-colonies have this fun habits of merging words from they're native languages with french, but they don't have peculiar letters for it.
>>78819091
>why does hanja look slightly more aesthetic than others? chu nom looks pretty cool too
probably because they never changed the characters they adopted.
Yes, we have Ä, Ö and Å and German has Ü and ß
>>78819442
We also use ü in Spanish, as well as our ñ.
>honour
>>78819065
G*rmans used to write everything in Fraktur
not regional variation, older typography
>>78819065
no more kanji in Korea, so you are wrong
they cannot write nor read the kanji characters
>>78819065
Wait
Taiwan uses traditional yet they write 真?
>>78820129
koreans know usually around 180 hanja I think
>>78819065
We have a bunch of letters english doesn't have for phonetic reasons.
Stuff like:á é ú ü ű ö ő
And a few "sounds" that count as one letter in the alphabet: dz dzs sz zs cs ly