Arabic Musnad Alphabet

de.Yass.X_ArabicMusnad

View detailed information for Arabic Musnad Alphabet — ratings, download counts, screenshots, pricing and developer details. See integrated SDKs and related technical data.

Total installs
13.8K(13,825)
Rating
4.5(4 reviews)
Released
May 19, 2020
Last updated
August 22, 2025
Category
Education
Developer
YASS
Developer details
Name
YASS
E-mail
myapps.gstore@outlook.de
Website
unknown
Country
unknown
Address
unknown
Android SDKs
Arabic Musnad Alphabet Header - AppWisp.com

Screenshots

Arabic Musnad Alphabet Screenshot 1 - AppWisp.com
Arabic Musnad Alphabet Screenshot 2 - AppWisp.com
Arabic Musnad Alphabet Screenshot 3 - AppWisp.com
Arabic Musnad Alphabet Screenshot 4 - AppWisp.com

Description

The App can be used to write texts in ancient Arabic Alphabet "Musnad". This can be easily done using the keyboard, which allows entring text in Arabic, Latin, or Musnad letters. The content can be locally stored, shared or copied and pasted into any other application that supports the global Unicode.

The earliest inscriptions of clear matured forms for Musnad scripts is from the time period, around the 9th to10th centuries BCE. Musnad and Phoenician had clear common roots, shapes and maturity period.
 
Many articles and books repeate the conclusions of western scholars of the nineteenth century, based on a handful of inscriptions, about a Arab Nabataean transformation to Arabic script. Few, like Mādūn, challenged this notion with serious and interesting analysis and reasoning. He speculated with illustrative details about a possible transformation of older Arabic Musnad shapes to modern ones, instead. Today there are many books and articles, disagreeing with the Aramaic Nabataean origin theory without offering a solid alternative theory.

For a long time, early Arabic was torn between its Musnad roots and the more mature Aramaic scripts around it. It may have had incorporated several Nabataean shapes, but it is hard to definitely claim it was a transformed Nabataean script based on a couple of inscriptions distantly resembling Arabic, especially since Aramaic Nabataean and Musnad have similar shape roots.