The Conversion of Scripts, Its Nature, History, and Utilization |
Common terms and phrases
according achieve actually alphabet already application Arabic became become bibliographic control catalogs century characters Chinese codes communication complete considered contained conventions countries Cyrillic designed developed devised diacritical marks difficulties dissimilar scripts documents English entirely entries example exist express Figure foreign French German given graphemes graphic Greek Hebrew important indicate International Italy Japanese known language later Latin least less letters librarians libraries linguistic listed literate literature means methods names necessary non-Roman scripts official operators original orthography particular Persian phonetic possible practice present principle printed problem pronounced pronunciation proposed published records reference rendering requirements result Roman script Romanization schemes rules Russian scheme scholars scientific script conversion signs sounds spelling spoken standard Table tion transcribed transcription translation transliteration universal users various vowels Western writing system written