New Scientist
Image: Kelly et al.
The symbols we use to write words evolve to become visually simpler over time, and an analysis of a writing system from West Africa shows that they can do so over just a few generations.
The script used to write the Vai language was invented in Liberia in 1833 and is still in use today. Those who devised it may have had some awareness of the Latin and Arabic alphabets, but the Vai script isn’t modelled on either. Its characters denote whole syllables, while alphabetic letters represent the individual sounds (or phonemes) that come together to form syllables. Read more on new scientist.com…