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  1. The Etruscan alphabet used by the Etruscans, an ancient civilization of central and northern Italy, to write their language, from about 700 BC to sometime around 100 AD . The Etruscan alphabet derives from the Euboean alphabet used in the Greek colonies in southern Italy which belonged to the "western" ("red") type, the so-called Western Greek ...

  2. Type of writing system: alphabet. Writing direction: right to left (or left to right) in horizontal lines, or boustrophedon (alternating right to left and left to right) Used to write: Etruscan. Words were originally written without spaces. In later texts a dot or double dot (like a colon) is used to separate words.

  3. Etruscan alphabet, writing system of the Etruscans, derived from a Greek alphabet (originally learned from the Phoenicians) as early as the 8th century bc. It is known to modern scholars from more than 10,000 inscriptions. Like the alphabets of the Middle East and the early forms of the Greek.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Etruscan ( / ɪˈtrʌskən / ih-TRUSK-ən) [3] was the language of the Etruscan civilization in the ancient region of Etruria, [a] in Etruria Padana [b] and Etruria Campana [c] in what is now Italy. Etruscan influenced Latin but was eventually completely superseded by it. The Etruscans left around 13,000 inscriptions that have been found so far ...

  5. Etruscan language, language isolate spoken by close neighbours of the ancient Romans. The Romans called the Etruscan s Etrusci or Tusci; in Greek they were called Tyrsenoi or Tyrrhenoi; in Umbrian and Italic language their name can be found in the adjective turskum. The Etruscans’ name for themselves was rasna or raśna.

    • Murray Fowler
  6. Feb 21, 2017 · The language of the Etruscans, like the people themselves, has remained somewhat mysterious and has yet to be fully understood.The alphabet used a western Greek script, but the language has presented difficulties to scholars because it is unrelated to contemporary Indo-European languages and the surviving examples of it are largely limited to very short inscriptions, the majority of which are ...

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  8. Etruscan did not appear in written form until the seventh century B.C., after contact with Euboean Greek traders and colonists, and it is the Euboean Greek alphabet that the Etruscans adopted and adapted to fulfill the phonological and grammatical needs of their native tongue. The Etruscans wrote right to left, and many of the Greek letters are ...

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