Khowar language and alphabet
Khowar (کھوار) , or Chitrali, is a member of the Dardic branch of the Indo-Aryan language family. It has about a million speakers mainly in Pakistan, especially in Chitral in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, in the Ghizer district of Gilgit-Baltistan and in parts of Upper Swat. This alphabet was devised by Rehmat Aziz Chitrali with the collaboration of Khowar Academy and has been used since 1996. (...)
Talysh language and alphabet
Talysh (tolışə zıvon / толышә зывон / تالشی زَوُن) is a Northwestern Iranian language with about 500,000 to 1 million speakers in Gilan and Ardabil provinces in Iran, and in southern parts of Azerbaijan. It has three main clusters of dialects: Northern, Central and Southern, with the Northern dialect spoken in Azerbaijan and Iran, and the others in Iran. There is some mutual intelligibilty between Talysh and Persian. (...)
Interslavic language, alphabet and pronunciation
Interslavic (меджусловјански / Medžuslovjanski) is an international auxiliary language designed to be used by speakers of different Slavic languages to communicate with one another. Interslavic removes the idiosyncrasies in Slavic languages that make it difficult for speakers to understand each other and focuses on the numerous words and forms that the Slavic languages have in common. (...)
The Shavian alphabet is named after George Bernard Shaw and was devised by Kingsley Read. Shaw saw use of the Latin alphabet for writing English as a great waste of time, energy and paper, so in his will he stipulated that a competition should be held to create a new writing system for English and made provision for a prize of £500. The competition took place in 1958 and Kingsley Read's system was chosen as the winner out of the 467 entries.