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  1. Like the Phoenician alphabet, it is a slight regional variant and an immediate continuation of the Proto-Canaanite script, which was used throughout Canaan in the Late Bronze Age. Phoenician , Hebrew , and all of their sister Canaanite languages were largely indistinguishable dialects before that time.

  2. Black-glaze Boeotian kantharos, 450–425 BC. The history of the Greek alphabet starts with the adoption of Phoenician letter forms in the 9th–8th centuries BC during early Archaic Greece and continues to the present day. The Greek alphabet was developed during the Iron Age, centuries after the loss of Linear B, the syllabic script that was ...

  3. L' alphabet phénicien (appelé par convention alphabet protocananéen pour les inscriptions antérieures à 1200 av. J.-C.) est un ancien abjad, un alphabet consonantique non pictographique 1. Il était utilisé pour l'écriture des langues cananéennes et en particulier du phénicien, langue sémitique utilisée par la civilisation phénicienne.

  4. History of Phoenicia. Phoenicia was an ancient Semitic-speaking thalassocratic civilization that originated in the Levant region of the eastern Mediterranean, primarily modern Lebanon. [1] [2] At its height between 1100 and 200 BC, Phoenician civilization spread across the Mediterranean, from Cyprus to the Iberian Peninsula .

  5. Alfabeto fenício. Vários modelos de alfabetos como o latino, o grego, e o árabe evoluiram do aramaico, que por sua vez foi a única evolução do fenício. O alfabeto fenício (na verdade um abjad /consonantário, por ter apenas as consoantes e não as vogais), foi o sistema de escrita usado na Fenícia (atuais Síria, Líbano e norte de ...

  6. Descrição Phoenician alphabet.svg. English: The Phoenician alphabet. Note that ’ and ‘ were originally full consonants in the Phoenician language (glottal stop ʔ and voiced pharyngeal ʕ respectively). Several of the letters were ambiguous (i.e. denoted more than one consonant phoneme) when the Phoenician alphabet was borrowed to write ...

  7. Phoenician is a Unicode block containing characters used across the Mediterranean world from the 12th century BCE to the 3rd century CE. The Phoenician alphabet was added to the Unicode Standard in July 2006 with the release of version 5.0. An alternative proposal to handle it as a font variation of Hebrew was turned down.