[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: Sorting of Asian telefone books



On Thu, 2006-11-16 at 10:38 +0100, Wouter Verhelst wrote:
> 
> Additionally, the Japanese really use four alphabets: Hiragana (for
> Japanese words or syllables that don't have a kanji character), Katakana
> (for loan words or to place emphasis), Kanji, and our latin alphabet for
> loan words that can't be written by use of katakana. Although you
> probably won't find the last one in a Japanese dictionary (though I
> can't be sure, never having seen one), you will be able to find words
> written in at least hiragana, possibly also katakana in one. These two
> alphabets contain "only" 104 characters, and have a particular sorting
> order.

Both kana are syllabaries, not alphabets, but since they are short, you
are correct that they are easily sorted with normal radix methods.
That's why I didn't mention them.  The question was about names, which
are pretty much always written with Kanji in Japanese.

Katakana are satisfactory for all loan words; the use of Roman letters
is for different reasons.

Thomas

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part


Reply to: