Tolianem script

The Tolianem script - also known as the Toryanen script - is the primarily writing system of the Wood Elven language - at least the variant used in the Kingdom of Dragoc - and was historically also used to write High Elven too. It is an abugida, where vowels are written as diacritics over or next to consonantal glyphs.

High Elven
In addition to Wood Elven, the Tolianem script was also used for the Archaic High Elven language alongside the Early High Elven alphabet - however, the Tolianem script was abruptly phased out of usage after the Early High Elven alphabet evolved into the Classical High Elven alphabet.

Wood Elven
As soon as the script came into existence, it was adopted for writing the Archaic Wood Elven language. Initially, there were two main styles of writing: a "straight" left-to-right system, and a more pseudo-syllabic blocky system, in which letters making up the same syllable written in a block from top to bottom, while a left-to-right ordering of syllables. Unintuitive to foreigners, this system helped native speakers know which syllable did an individual letter belong to, thus being able to apply various syllable-boundary shifts. The pseudo-syllabic block-system was the dominant one for a long time. Its usage continued well into the Classical Era, where calls for spelling reforms were interrupted by a Golden Age of Classical Literature, giving the previously-declining block-writing one last renaissance. As the Classical Wood Elven language evolved into the Contemporary Wood Elven language, a spelling reform was made, which not only deprecated a lot of redundant letters, but also gave the final mercy-kill to the pseudo-syllabic blocky system, finally phasing it out and mandating the left-to-right system.

Input
Everything you need to know is written in Template:TOL/doc. This writing system was created by staticj3ff.