Native Script

Script Writer

Type ordinary Simple Encoding and see how the current Blaken script font shapes it into syllable blocks.

Simple Encoding

Use ordinary keyboard spelling. The writer adds hidden syllable separators for the font when a final-like consonant is followed by another vowel.

Samples

Blaken script preview

The preview uses the Blaken Script font and updates as you type.

How it works

The writer keeps the source text in Simple Encoding, then prepares a display copy for the font. Periods used inside dictionary compounds become apostrophes, final-like consonants before another vowel are treated as the next syllable's onset, and the font's OpenType rules combine sequences such as eo, ao, nh, ph, lh, tc, dz, wa, weo, ja, plus common finals, into script blocks. Lowercase eo and ao at the start of a block are prepared as the same initial shortcuts as EO and AO; after an onset they stay normal nuclei. A manual apostrophe can override the automatic reading, as in man'e.

What to expect

This is a renderer, not a grammar checker. Apostrophes shown in the helper input are technical shaping separators; ordinary Simple Encoding can usually be typed without them. Unsupported sequences may appear as plain letters or provisional glyphs. The PNG export draws the visible preview onto a dark background so it remains readable outside the site.