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Romanization - Greek | A Wisdom Archive on Romanization - Greek |  | Romanization - Greek A selection of articles related to Romanization - Greek |  |
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More material related to Romanization can be found here:
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Romanization, Romanization - Arabic, Romanization - Brahmic scripts, Romanization - Chinese, Romanization - Cyrillic, Romanization - Greek, Romanization - Hebrew, Romanization - Japanese, Romanization - Korean, Romanization - Methods of romanization, Romanization - Overview/Summary, Romanization - Romanization of specific writing systems, Romanization - Thai, Romanization - Tradeoffs, Romanization - Transcription, Romanization - Transliteration, Anglicisation, Francization
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Romanization - Greek |  |  |  | Romanization - Greek: Encyclopedia II - Romanization - Romanization of specific writing systems
Romanization - Arabic.
For more detail, see Arabic transliteration
The Arabic alphabet is used to write Arabic, Persian, and Urdu. Romanization standards include:
Deutsche Morgenländische Gesellschaft (1936): [1] Adopted by the International Convention of Orientalist Scholars in Rome. It is the basis for the very influential Hans Wehr dictionary (ISBN 0879500034).
BS 4280 (1968): Developed by the British Standards Institute [2]
SATTS (1970s): Developed by US military< ...
See also:Romanization, Romanization - Methods of Romanization, Romanization - Transliteration, Romanization - Transcription, Romanization - Tradeoffs, Romanization - Romanization of specific writing systems, Romanization - Arabic, Romanization - Hebrew, Romanization - Brahmic scripts, Romanization - Chinese, Romanization - Japanese, Romanization - Korean, Romanization - Thai, Romanization - Cyrillic, Romanization - Greek, Romanization - Overview and summary Read more here: » Romanization: Encyclopedia II - Romanization - Romanization of specific writing systems |
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 |  |  | Romanization - Greek: Encyclopedia II - Romanization - Romanization of specific writing systems
Romanization - Arabic.
For more detail, see Arabic transliteration
The Arabic alphabet is used to write Arabic, Persian, and Urdu. Romanization standards include:
Deutsche Morgenländische Gesellschaft (1936): [1] Adopted by the International Convention of Orientalist Scholars in Rome. It is the basis for the very influential Hans Wehr dictionary (ISBN 0879500034).
BS 4280 (1968): Developed by the British Standards Institute [2]
SATTS (1970s): Developed by US military< ...
See also:Romanization, Romanization - Methods of romanization, Romanization - Transliteration, Romanization - Transcription, Romanization - Tradeoffs, Romanization - Romanization of specific writing systems, Romanization - Arabic, Romanization - Hebrew, Romanization - Brahmic scripts, Romanization - Chinese, Romanization - Japanese, Romanization - Korean, Romanization - Thai, Romanization - Cyrillic, Romanization - Greek, Romanization - Overview/Summary Read more here: » Romanization: Encyclopedia II - Romanization - Romanization of specific writing systems |
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 |  |  | Romanization - Greek: Encyclopedia II - Romanization - Methods of romanization
Romanization - Transliteration.
If the romanization attempts to transliterate the original script, the guiding principle is a one-to-one mapping of characters in the source language into the target script, with less emphasis on how the result sounds when pronounced according to the reader's language. For example, the Nihon-shiki romanization of Japanese allows the informed reader to reconstruct the original Japanese kana syllables with 100% accuracy, but is not readable without prior study.
See also:Romanization, Romanization - Methods of romanization, Romanization - Transliteration, Romanization - Transcription, Romanization - Tradeoffs, Romanization - Romanization of specific writing systems, Romanization - Arabic, Romanization - Hebrew, Romanization - Brahmic scripts, Romanization - Chinese, Romanization - Japanese, Romanization - Korean, Romanization - Thai, Romanization - Cyrillic, Romanization - Greek, Romanization - Overview/Summary Read more here: » Romanization: Encyclopedia II - Romanization - Methods of romanization |
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 |  |  | Romanization - Greek: Encyclopedia II - Romanization - Methods of Romanization
Romanization - Transliteration.
If the romanization attempts to transliterate the original script, the guiding principle is a one-to-one mapping of characters in the source language into the target script, with less emphasis on how the result sounds when pronounced according to the reader's language. For example, the Nihon-shiki romanization of Japanese allows the informed reader to reconstruct the original Japanese kana syllables with 100% accuracy, but is not readable without prior study.
See also:Romanization, Romanization - Methods of Romanization, Romanization - Transliteration, Romanization - Transcription, Romanization - Tradeoffs, Romanization - Romanization of specific writing systems, Romanization - Arabic, Romanization - Hebrew, Romanization - Brahmic scripts, Romanization - Chinese, Romanization - Japanese, Romanization - Korean, Romanization - Thai, Romanization - Cyrillic, Romanization - Greek, Romanization - Overview and summary Read more here: » Romanization: Encyclopedia II - Romanization - Methods of Romanization |
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More material related to Romanization can be found here:
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