All alphabets with case were once unicase. Latin, for example, used to be written without case in imperial Roman times; it was only later that scribes developed a new set of symbols for running text, which became the lower case of the Latin alphabet, and the letterforms of Ancient Rome became what we now call capitals.
The Georgian alphabet, in contrast, went the other way: the medieval Georgian alphabet with its two cases gave in to a unicase set. The ecclesiastical form of the Georgian alphabet, Khutsuri, had an upper case called Asomtavruli (like the Ancient Roman capitals) and a lower case called Nuskhuri (like the medieval Latin scribal forms). Out of Nuskhuri came a secular alphabet called Mkhedruli, which is the unicase Georgian alphabet in use today.
A unicase version of the Latin alphabet was proposed by Michael Mann and David Dalby in 1982 as a variation of the Niamey African Reference Alphabet. This version has apparently never been actively used. The International Phonetic Alphabet only uses lowercase Latin (and Greek) letters and some scaled uppercase letters, effectively making it a unicase alphabet, although it is not used for actual writing of any language.
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Last updated on Saturday September 29, 2007 at 10:53:10 PDT (GMT -0700)
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