Cuneiform, Sumero-Akkadian vs Old South Arabian

Writing system comparison · ISO Xsux vs ISO Sarb

Cuneiform, Sumero-Akkadian is a Historical Left-to-right script from Middle Eastern used by 2 languages. Old South Arabian is a Historical Right-to-left script from Middle Eastern (32 Unicode characters) used by 1 language. A key difference is reading direction: Cuneiform, Sumero-Akkadian reads Left-to-right, while Old South Arabian reads Right-to-left.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Attribute Cuneiform, Sumero-Akkadian Old South Arabian
ISO Code Xsux Sarb
Direction Left-to-right Right-to-left
Status Historical Historical
Region Middle Eastern Middle Eastern
Characters 32
Languages 2 1
Script Type Logographic Abjad
Descended From Imperial Aramaic
Introduced 3200 BCE 900 BCE
Unicode Ranges
U+10A60–U+10A7F

Only in Cuneiform, Sumero-Akkadian

2 languages

Used by Both

0 languages
No shared languages

Only in Old South Arabian

1 language

More Comparisons

Data sourced from the ISO 15924 registry, Unicode CLDR, and the Unicode Character Database.