| 21. | These logograms are used mainly for functional words such as pronouns, articles, prepositions, and conjunctions.
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| 22. | The practice of using these logograms appears to have originated from the use of Aramaic in the Japanese.
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| 23. | A peculiar system of logograms developed within the Pahlavi scripts ( developed from the variant of the Arabic alphabet.
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| 24. | Written Akkadian included phonetic symbols from the Sumerian syllabary, together with logograms that were read as whole words.
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| 25. | Chinese logograms extensively in its writing systems, with most of the symbols carrying the same or similar meanings.
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| 26. | Chinese characters and Japanese kanji are logograms; some Egyptian hieroglyphs and some graphemes in cuneiform script are also logograms.
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| 27. | Chinese characters and Japanese kanji are logograms; some Egyptian hieroglyphs and some graphemes in cuneiform script are also logograms.
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| 28. | Maya writing used logograms complemented by a set of syllabic glyphs, somewhat similar in function to modern Japanese writing.
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| 29. | Sources suggest that it is a mixture of pictograms, ideograms, and logograms as the nsibidi article already notes.
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| 30. | The vast array of logograms and the memorization of what they mean are major disadvantages of logographic systems over alphabetic systems.
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