"Syllabaries" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
A syllabary is a set of written symbols that represent syllables in a language. In other words, a set of characters that represent the sound and structure of a syllable, which is a unit of sound in a word.
Syllabaries are often used in languages that don't use an alphabet, or which combine elements of other writing systems. Examples include:
Japanese (Hiragana and Katakana)
Cherokee (a Native American language)
Inuktitut (a Canadian Aboriginal language)
In a syllabary, each symbol represents a distinct sound or combination of sounds that make up a syllable. This can make the writing system more phonetic and easier to read, but also less versatile than an alphabet.