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Orthography

The visual representation of language in writing across Spanish, English and Chinese.

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Orthography encompasses writing conventions: spelling, punctuation, capitalization, and formatting. Spanish is largely phonemic. English has a deep orthography. Chinese uses logographic characters.

Examples

Alphabet size

27 letters (including ñ)

Sound-letter correspondence

Highly regular (phonemic)

Stress marking

Written accents on unpredictable stress: café / cafe / café

Hyphenation at line breaks

By syllable: ca-sa, es-tu-dian-te

Capitalization rules

Limited: proper nouns, sentence-initial; languages/days lower case

Decimal/thousands separator

1.234,56 (period = thousands, comma = decimal)

Quotation marks

« » or " "

Writing direction

Left-to-right, top-to-bottom

Examples

Alphabet size

26 letters

Sound-letter correspondence

Irregular (deep orthography)

Stress marking

No stress marking in writing

Hyphenation at line breaks

By syllable with morphological preference: un-happy, speak-ing

Capitalization rules

Extensive: proper nouns, I, months, days, languages

Decimal/thousands separator

1,234.56 (comma = thousands, period = decimal)

Quotation marks

" ""

Writing direction

Left-to-right, top-to-bottom

Examples

Alphabet size

~50,000 characters; ~3,500 commonly used

Sound-letter correspondence

Characters represent morphemes, not sounds directly

Stress marking

No stress marking; Pinyin uses tone marks

Hyphenation at line breaks

No hyphenation; characters are atomic units

Capitalization rules

None

Decimal/thousands separator

1,234.56 (Arabic) or qiānèrbǎisānshídiǎnliù

Quotation marks

" ""

Writing direction

Left-to-right (modern); traditionally top-to-bottom, right-to-left

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Alphabet size 27 letters (including ñ)26 letters~50,000 characters; ~3,500 commonly used
Sound-letter correspondence Highly regular (phonemic)Irregular (deep orthography)Characters represent morphemes, not sounds directly
Stress marking Written accents on unpredictable stress: café / cafe / caféNo stress marking in writingNo stress marking; Pinyin uses tone marks
Hyphenation at line breaks By syllable: ca-sa, es-tu-dian-teBy syllable with morphological preference: un-happy, speak-ingNo hyphenation; characters are atomic units
Capitalization rules Limited: proper nouns, sentence-initial; languages/days lower caseExtensive: proper nouns, I, months, days, languagesNone
Decimal/thousands separator 1.234,56 (period = thousands, comma = decimal)1,234.56 (comma = thousands, period = decimal)1,234.56 (Arabic) or qiānèrbǎisānshídiǎnliù
Quotation marks « » or " "" """ ""
Writing direction Left-to-right, top-to-bottomLeft-to-right, top-to-bottomLeft-to-right (modern); traditionally top-to-bottom, right-to-left

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Alphabet size 27 letters (including ñ)26 letters~50,000 characters; ~3,500 commonly used
Sound-letter correspondence Highly regular (phonemic)Irregular (deep orthography)Characters represent morphemes, not sounds directly
Stress marking Written accents on unpredictable stress: café / cafe / caféNo stress marking in writingNo stress marking; Pinyin uses tone marks
Hyphenation at line breaks By syllable: ca-sa, es-tu-dian-teBy syllable with morphological preference: un-happy, speak-ingNo hyphenation; characters are atomic units
Capitalization rules Limited: proper nouns, sentence-initial; languages/days lower caseExtensive: proper nouns, I, months, days, languagesNone
Decimal/thousands separator 1.234,56 (period = thousands, comma = decimal)1,234.56 (comma = thousands, period = decimal)1,234.56 (Arabic) or qiānèrbǎisānshídiǎnliù
Quotation marks « » or " "" """ ""
Writing direction Left-to-right, top-to-bottomLeft-to-right, top-to-bottomLeft-to-right (modern); traditionally top-to-bottom, right-to-left

Examples in context

Alphabet size

Spanish

27 letters (including ñ)

English

26 letters

Chinese

~50,000 characters; ~3,500 commonly used

Sound-letter correspondence

Spanish

Highly regular (phonemic)

English

Irregular (deep orthography)

Chinese

Characters represent morphemes, not sounds directly

Stress marking

Spanish

Written accents on unpredictable stress: café / cafe / café

English

No stress marking in writing

Chinese

No stress marking; Pinyin uses tone marks

Hyphenation at line breaks

Spanish

By syllable: ca-sa, es-tu-dian-te

English

By syllable with morphological preference: un-happy, speak-ing

Chinese

No hyphenation; characters are atomic units

Capitalization rules

Spanish

Limited: proper nouns, sentence-initial; languages/days lower case

English

Extensive: proper nouns, I, months, days, languages

Chinese

None

Decimal/thousands separator

Spanish

1.234,56 (period = thousands, comma = decimal)

English

1,234.56 (comma = thousands, period = decimal)

Chinese

1,234.56 (Arabic) or qiānèrbǎisānshídiǎnliù

Quotation marks

Spanish

« » or " "

English

" ""

Chinese

" ""

Writing direction

Spanish

Left-to-right, top-to-bottom

English

Left-to-right, top-to-bottom

Chinese

Left-to-right (modern); traditionally top-to-bottom, right-to-left

Key Takeaways

Spanish: Phonemic alphabet with regular sound-letter correspondence. Diacritics mark stress and distinguish homophones. Limited capitalization.

English: Deep orthography with many irregularities. Silent letters, multiple spellings for same sound. Extensive capitalization.

Chinese: Logographic system. Characters are atomic units. No spaces, no capitalization. Pinyin provides phonetic transcription.

Key concepts compared: Alphabet size, Sound-letter correspondence, Stress marking.

Last updated: June 4, 2026