Osage script

The Osage script is a new script promulgated in 2006 and revised 2012–2014 for the Osage language. Because Latin orthographies were subject to interference from English conventions among Osage students who were more familiar with English than with Osage, in 2006 the director of the Osage Language Program, Herman Mongrain Lookout, decided to create a distinct script by modifying or fusing Latin letters. This Osage script has been in regular use on the Osage Nation ever since.

Osage
Script type
Time period
2006–present
DirectionLeft-to-right 
LanguagesOsage
Related scripts
Parent systems
ISO 15924
ISO 15924Osge (219), Osage
Unicode
Unicode alias
Osage
U+104B0U+104FF

In 2012, while in the process of submitting the script to Unicode, a more precise representation of the sounds of Osage was formulated, and by the following year had been adequately tested. In February 2014, a conference on standardizing the reforms was held by Lookout and the staff at the Osage Nation Language Department along with UCS expert Michael Everson. The result included the introduction of case, the abolition of two letters, and the creation of several more.

The Osage script was included in Unicode version 9.0 in June 2016 in the Osage block.

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