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  1. History of writing. Six major historical writing systems (left to right, top to bottom): Sumerian pictographs, Egyptian hieroglyphs, Chinese characters, Old Persian cuneiform, Latin alphabet, Devanagari. The history of writing traces the development of writing systems [1] and how their use transformed and was transformed by different societies.

  2. Historical accounts of the evolution of writing systems have until recently concentrated on a single aspect, increased efficiency, with the Greek invention of the alphabet being regarded as the culmination of a long historical evolution.

  3. Apr 28, 2011 · Writing is the physical manifestation of a spoken language. It is thought that human beings developed language c. 35,000 BCE as evidenced by cave paintings from the period of the Cro-Magnon Man (c. 50,000-30,000 BCE) which appear to express concepts concerning daily life. These images suggest a language because, in some instances, they seem to ...

  4. Feb 6, 2021 · Writing – a system of graphic marks representing the units of a specific language – has been invented independently in the Near East, China and Mesoamerica. The cuneiform script, created in Mesopotamia, present-day Iraq, ca. 3200 BC, was first.

  5. Writing, form of human communication by means of a set of visible marks that are related, by convention, to some particular structural level of language. Languages are systems of symbols, and writing is a system for symbolizing these symbols. Learn more about writing in this article.

  6. Sep 4, 2022 · An ancient civilization of southern Mesopotamia, is believed to be the place where written language was first invented around 3200 BCE. Beginning with the Neolithic pottery phase, when clay tokens were used to keep track of particular quantities of animals or other goods, writing first appeared.

  7. writing, System of human visual communication using signs or symbols associated by convention with units of language —meanings or sounds—and recorded on materials such as paper, stone, or clay. Its precursor was pictography. Logography, in which symbols stand for individual words, typically develops from pictography.

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