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|phoneme=ś, s
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{{c||Ś}} is the standard form of San in Raetic; {{c||Ś2}} occurs only once in the epigraphically peculiar [[index::PU-1]]. {{c||Ś3}} is never securely attested as a letter, but only as part of a factory mark in [[index::Bostel]]. Its attestation in a [[index::SR-9|language-encoding inscription]] is highly dubious. Inverted forms are not attested.


San is generally assumed to write the marked sibilant {{p||ś}} ([ʃ] vel sim.), as it does in the Venetic writing tradition (see [[index::Script]]). The inscriptions from [[index::San Giorgio di Valpolicella]] may represent an exception: San occurs three times, Sigma never; San might be argued to write {{p||s}} in [[index::VR-14]]. See also [[index::Z]] for evidence of the influence of Etruscan writing in the area of Verona.
The variant {{c||Ś}} is the standard form of San in Raetic; {{c||Ś2}}, typical for the Lugano corpus (see {{bib|Lexicon Leponticum}}: [http://www.univie.ac.at/lexlep/wiki/%C5%9A Ś]), occurs only once in the epigraphically peculiar [[index::PU-1]]. {{c||Ś3}} is never securely attested as a letter, but only as part of a factory mark in [[index::Bostel]]. Its attestation in a [[index::SR-9|language-encoding inscription]] is highly dubious. Inverted forms are not attested.
 
San is generally assumed to write a marked sibilant ([ʃ] vel sim.), as it does in the Venetic writing tradition (see [[index::Script]]); hence the transliteration with ''ś''. The inscriptions from [[index::San Giorgio di Valpolicella]] may represent an exception: San occurs three times, [[index::S|Sigma]] never; San might be argued to write {{p||s}} in [[index::VR-14]]. See also [[index::Z]] for evidence of the influence of Etruscan writing in the area of Verona.

Latest revision as of 01:52, 22 May 2016

Character
Customary name: san, sade
Represents: ś, s

Variants and attestation

Transliteration Sinistroverse Dextroverse
  Glyph Number Glyph Number
Ś Ś.png 16 Śd.png 6
Ś2 Ś2.png 0 Ś2d.png 1
Ś3 Ś3.png 2 Ś3d.png 4


The variant Ś s is the standard form of San in Raetic; Ś2 s, typical for the Lugano corpus (see Lexicon Leponticum: Ś), occurs only once in the epigraphically peculiar PU-1. Ś3 s is never securely attested as a letter, but only as part of a factory mark in Bostel. Its attestation in a language-encoding inscription is highly dubious. Inverted forms are not attested.

San is generally assumed to write a marked sibilant ([ʃ] vel sim.), as it does in the Venetic writing tradition (see Script); hence the transliteration with ś. The inscriptions from San Giorgio di Valpolicella may represent an exception: San occurs three times, Sigma never; San might be argued to write s in VR-14. See also Z for evidence of the influence of Etruscan writing in the area of Verona.