LATIN ALPHABET EVOLUTION FROM EARLY PERIOD TO INTERNET AGE
Annotatsiya
This article examines the evolution of the Latin alphabet from its early historical formation to its contemporary digital and internet-mediated forms. The study treats the alphabet not only as a stable graphemic inventory but as a socio-technical system whose norms shift under pressures of governance, education, economics and platform design. Using a qualitative review of linguistic and communication studies and a comparative descriptive methodology, the paper outlines three development phases: classical standardization, national modernization and the internet age characterized by encoding standards, hybrid orthographic practices and visual-graphic expansion. The analysis highlights how Latin script today functions simultaneously as an orthographic norm and as a resource for identity, speed, branding and multimodal expression in digital discourse. The paper argues that internet affordances intensify variability in spelling, abbreviation and graphic substitution, while also pushing renewed standardization through Unicode, keyboard layouts and platform policies. The results clarify the linguistic mechanisms through which Latin script adapts to new domains such as business terminology, online naming, and mixed-code interaction.
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