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Lécriture

L'écriture, meaning the writing, is a term used to describe several related concepts in linguistics, history, and religion. In general, it denotes the act of writing—transcribing language on a medium—as well as the fixed system of signs used to represent a language. It can also refer to the written texts themselves or to the field of study concerned with writing systems, orthography, and manuscripts.

As a human technology, writing arose independently in various regions and evolved from proto-writing into full

In religious contexts, les Écritures or l'Écriture sainte refers to sacred scriptures, notably the Bible, in

L'écriture also denotes orthography—the conventional spelling and punctuation of a language—and, more recently, debates about gender-neutral

writing
systems.
Early
examples
include
cuneiform
in
Mesopotamia
and
hieroglyphs
in
Egypt;
alphabetic
systems
emerged
with
the
Phoenician
script
around
the
second
millennium
BCE,
from
which
Greek
and
Latin
alphabets
developed.
Writing
enabled
the
preservation
and
transmission
of
information
across
generations
and
geographies.
In
modern
times,
writing
is
mediated
by
technologies
from
ink
and
pen
to
typewriters,
printers,
and
digital
keyboards.
Christian
usage;
in
Judaism,
the
Tanakh
is
also
treated
as
scripture.
The
term
thus
signals
authority
attributed
to
sacred
texts
within
communities.
or
inclusive
writing
in
French,
sometimes
described
as
écriture
inclusive.
In
linguistic
studies,
écriture
is
contrasted
with
the
spoken
form
and
with
phonemic
transcription,
focusing
on
how
signs
map
to
language.