Advertisement

Advertisement

syllabarium

[sil-uh-bair-ee-uhm]

noun

plural

syllabaria 
  1. syllabary.



Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of syllabarium1

From New Latin; syllabary
Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The highly complicated syllabarium of the Eastern Semites is reduced to a phonetic system; we might almost say to an alphabet of about 40 letters.

Read more on Project Gutenberg

This alphabet is a syllabarium.

Read more on Project Gutenberg

Like Doala, too, he had a language adapted to a syllabarium.

Read more on Project Gutenberg

It also appears that the Syllabarium of the Universe, and typically the open two-letter syllables of Language, as bi, be, ba, correspond as analogues with the Physical Principles which lie at the basis of the Sciences; and finally, that the completed Root-Words, typically the closed three-letter syllables, or usual monosyllabic root-words, as min, men, man, correspond with the descriptive generalizations or general averages of Natural Science, as Universe itself, Matter, Mind, Movement, etc.

Read more on Project Gutenberg

Discarding then the Assyrian notion of a syllabarium, with the enormous complication which it involves, the Medes strove to reduce sounds to their ultimate elements, and to represent these last alone by symbols.

Read more on Project Gutenberg

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


syll.syllabary