From Rocks to Words
Imagine you are stacking blocks to build a tower. Each block is like a word in your writing. At first, people drew simple pictures of things they saw, like drawing a wavy line for water. This was called pictography. It was great because everyone could understand the picture, but it took forever to write long sentences using only drawings.
Later, people got smarter and faster. They realized they didn’t need a whole new picture for every single thing. Instead, they started using symbols to represent sounds. This allowed them to mix and match these sound blocks to make any word they wanted. Think of it like building with LEGOs. You have a small set of colorful bricks, but you can snap them together in millions of different ways to build a car, a house, or a spaceship. Writing systems evolved from big pictures into this flexible LEGO-like system of sounds and letters.
Why It Matters
This change was huge because now knowledge didn’t have to disappear when a person died. You could write it down on paper or stone, just like taking a photo of your favorite toy so you never forget what it looks like. Today, we use alphabets where each letter stands for a sound. This makes reading much faster than looking at hundreds of tiny pictures. It is the reason you can read this sentence right now without guessing every single item!
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See also
- Why Do We Say 'Bless You' When You Sneeze?
- What Is the Purpose of a Clock Tower?
- Why Do We Tell Stories?
- Why Do We Have Different Kinds of Music?
- Why Do We Have So Many Different Kinds of Languages?