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abjad

[ ab-jad ]

noun

, Linguistics.
  1. a system of writing, as in Hebrew and Arabic scripts, in which each symbol represents a consonantal sound, with few or no vowels being represented in the basic characters. abugida ( def ).


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Word History and Origins

Origin of abjad1

From Arabic ʾa(lif), b(āʾ), j(īm), d(āl), the first four letters of the Arabic script in its historical order; coined by U.S. linguist Peter T. Daniels (born 1951) in Fundamentals of Grammatology (1990); abugida ( def )
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Example Sentences

Argamon notes that written Hebrew is what’s known as an “abjad,” meaning a script with no vowels.

Others say it dates from an old way of calculating numbers called "Abjad".

From BBC

Shoghi Effendi, The Dispensation of Bahá’u’lláh.20.According to the abjad reckoning, the letters of “shidád” total 309.

In the abjad notation the name ‘Muḥammad’ has the same numerical value as ‘Nabíl’.

The abjad numerical equivalent of "Bahá" is nine.

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