The Lycian alphabet was used to write the Lycian language on the final stage of its existence. It was an extension of the Greek alphabet, with half a dozen new additional letters for sounds. However, it didn't stem from Greek directly, but rather from the Phoenician alphabet. It was largely similar to the Lydian and the Phrygian alphabets.
That's why the external similarity with the Greek alphabet is misleading: a number of letters similar in shape have completely different meanings. Although the Lycian script is basically alphabetic, there are some remnants of the consonantism of the Phoenician alphabet from which it originated (for example, one symbol for a consonant can mean a syllable).
์์ฑ
๋ฒ์ | 10280–1029F |
๋ฌธ์๋ค | 32 |
๋ฌธ์ ๋ชฉ๋ก
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ํธ์ง
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๐
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๋ฌธ์ ํ
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๐10280
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๐10281
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๐10282
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๐10283
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๐10284
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๐10285
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๐10286
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๐10287
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๐10288
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๐10289
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๐1028A
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๐1028B
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๐1028C
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๐1028D
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๐1028E
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๐1028F
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๐10290
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๐10291
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๐10292
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๐10293
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๐10294
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๐10295
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๐10296
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๐10297
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๐10298
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๐10299
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๐1029A
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๐1029B
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๐1029C
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1029D
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1029E
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1029F