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{{Short description|Abugida used in China}}
{{Infobox Writing system
| name = Pollard <br><small>Pollard Miao, {{script|Plrd|𖽃𖽔𖾐 𖽑𖼄𖽻𖾐}} (A-Hmao, Miao)</small>
| type = [[Abugida]]
| typedesc =
| time = ca. 1936 to the present
| creator = [[Sam Pollard (missionary)|Sam Pollard]]
| languages = [[A-Hmao language|A-Hmao]], [[Lipo language|Lipo]],
| fam1 = [[Canadian Aboriginal syllabics]]
| unicode = [https://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U16F00.pdf U+16F00–U+16F9F]
| iso15924 = Plrd
| sample = Manuscripts in the Yunnan Nationalities Museum - DSC03941.JPG
| caption = Miao
}}
The '''Pollard script''', also known as '''Pollard Miao''' (
Pollard credited the basic idea of the script to the [[Cree syllabics]] designed by [[James Evans (linguist)|James Evans]] in 1838–1841
The introduction of Christian materials in the script that Pollard invented had a great impact among the [[Miao people]]. Part of the reason was that they had a legend about how their ancestors had possessed a script but lost it. According to the legend, the script would be brought back some day. When the script was introduced, many Miao came from far away to see and learn it.<ref name="enwall-nopage">Enwall 1994</ref><ref>{{Cite journal | last1 = Tapp | first1 = N. | doi = 10.1017/S0022463400019858 | title = The Impact of Missionary Christianity Upon Marginalized Ethnic Minorities: The Case of the Hmong | journal = Journal of Southeast Asian Studies | volume = 20 | pages = 70–95 | year = 2011 | hdl = 1885/22258 | hdl-access = free }}. Republished in {{cite book |series=The Pacific World: Lands, Peoples and History of the Pacific, 1500–1900 |volume=17 |title=Religions and Missionaries around the Pacific, 1500–1900 |editor-last=Storch |editor-first=Tanya |publisher=Ashgate Publishing |year=2006 |pages=289–314 |isbn=9780754606673 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rR0GbqNKDzAC&pg=PA296 |access-date=20 July 2013 }}</ref> Changing politics in [[China]] led to the use of several competing scripts, most of which were [[romanization]]s. The Pollard script remains popular among [[Hmong people
As with most other abugidas, the Pollard letters represent [[consonant]]s, whereas [[vowel]]s are indicated by [[diacritic]]s. Uniquely, however, the position of this diacritic is varied to represent [[tone (linguistics)|tone]]. For example, in Western Hmong, placing the vowel diacritic above the consonant letter indicates that the syllable has a high tone, whereas placing it at the bottom right indicates a low tone.
==
{{Missing information|section|Image of letters for those who don't have a
The script was originally developed for A-Hmao, and adopted early for [[Lipo language|Lipo]]. {{Clarify|reason=Pollard died in 1915. How could he adapted the writing system in 1949?|date=December 2022|text=In 1949 Pollard adapted it for a group of Miao in [[Sichuan|Szechuan]], creating a distinct alphabet.}}<ref>{{cite book
| author=Duffy, John M.
| year=2007
| title=Writing from these roots: literacy in a Hmong-American community
| publisher=University of Hawaii Press
| isbn=978-0-8248-3095-
}}
</ref> There is also a [[Nasu language|Nasu]] alphabet using Pollard script.
=== Consonants ===▼
▲== Consonants ==
{| class="wikitable"
|- align="center" style="font-size: 18px"
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|}
▲== Vowels and Finals ==
{| class="wikitable"
|- align="center" style="font-size: 18px"
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|}
▲== Positioning Tone Marks ==
{| class="wikitable"
|- align="center" style="font-size: 18px"
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|}
▲== Baseline Tone Marks ==
{| class="wikitable"
|- align="center" style="font-size: 18px"
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|}
▲== Archaic Baseline Tone Marks ==
{| class="wikitable"
|- align="center" style="font-size: 18px"
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== Published sources ==
*{{cite book
|
| first=Joakim
| year=1994
| title=A Myth Become Reality: History and Development of the Miao Written Language, two volumes
| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iI0pAQAAIAAJ
|
| ___location=Stockholm
| publisher=Institute of Oriental Languages, Stockholm University
| isbn=9789171534231
}}
*{{cite journal
|
| first=Samuel
| date=December 1909
| title=Gathering up the Fragments
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}}
*{{cite journal
| author=Wen
| year=1938
| title=Lun Pollard Script
| script-title=zh:論 Pollard Script
| journal=Xinan bianjiang▼
| trans-title=Essay on the Pollard Script
| script-journal=zh:西南邊疆
| trans-journal=Southwest frontier region
| volume=1
| pages=43–53
}}
*{{cite journal
| author=Wen
| year=1951
| title=Guizhou Leishan xin chu Miaowen canshi chukao
| script-title=zh:貴州雷山新出苗文殘石初考
| trans-title=Preliminary investigation of the Miao writing fragments recently discovered in Leishan, Guizhou
| journal=Huaxi wenwu
| script-journal=zh:華西文物
| trans-journal=Huaxi University cultural relics
}} Reprinted in {{cite book
| author=Wen You
| year=1985
| title=Wen You lunji
| script-title=zh:聞宥論集
| trans-title=Collection of articles by Wen You
| pages=62–70
| ___location=Beijing
| publisher=Zhongyang minzu xueyuan keyanchu 中央民族學院科研處 [Scientific research office of the Central Institute for Nationalities]
}}
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}}
* {{cite web
|url=
|title=Across China on Foot
|
|last=Dingle
|author-link = Edwin Dingle
|work=Project Gutenberg
|access-date=
}} Dingle describes how Sam Pollard used positioning of vowel marks relative to consonants to indicate [[tone (linguistics)|tone]]s.
*{{cite web|url=http://phjamr.github.io/miao.html|title=Miao Unicode, Open source font for users of the Miao script}}
*[https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2023/23198-additions-to-miao-block.pdf Preliminary proposal for additions for Hei Yi to Miao block]
{{list of writing systems}}
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[[Category:Writing systems introduced in 1936]]
[[Category:Abugida writing systems]]
[[Category:West Hmongic languages]]
|