Orthography
Orthography is the conventional system for writing a language, including its letters or characters, diacritics, punctuation, and capitalization. It specifies how spoken language is represented in written form and defines the rules for spelling, hyphenation, punctuation, and the use of capitals. Orthography interacts with phonology and morphology but operates as a codified standard for written language rather than a description of speech or grammar.
Orthographic systems vary widely across languages and scripts. In alphabetic writing, letters typically encode sounds but
Historical development of orthography is gradual and often politically or culturally influenced. Orthographic reforms aim to
In modern use, orthography underpins literacy teaching, editorial standards, typography, and digital text processing. It interacts