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Chrisomalis, Stephen; Miton, Helen (Ed.)Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 9, 2025
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Matsumoto, Mallory E (, Topics in Cognitive Science)Chrisomalis, Stephen; Miton, Helen (Ed.)Abstract Throughout the long history of Classic Maya hieroglyphs, a logosyllabic writing system used from the late first millennium BCE through the mid‐second millennium CE in southern Mesoamerica, the most commonly recorded phonetic value was the syllableu(/ʔu/). With over a dozen differentuhieroglyphs, Classic Maya scribes had more options for recording /ʔu/ than any other syllable or logograph. Cognitive approaches to writing systems typically attribute graphemic variation (i.e., alternation between signs with equivalent linguistic value) to semantic differences like animacy or to non‐linguistic factors like identity. Distribution of Classic Mayauhieroglyphs, however, suggests that morphosyntactic context influenced which grapheme scribes wrote and when. This case suggests that scribal knowledge of Classic Maya hieroglyphs included ideas about writing's relationship to language. It also highlights the cognitive relevance of morphosyntax for a writing system's users as they differentiate among graphic signs with identical linguistic denotation.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available November 9, 2025
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