>>696051When going through an alphabet, each letter for the consonants are vocalized with a paired up vowel.
So for example in English, one would spell
bee when saying/vocalizing
b, or
ef for
f.
Those who researched Hungarian runes, they usually went for the
ef way, and each consonant would go as
eb,
ec,
ed,
ef... but they found that for example the
k rune has two forms and one seems to be used in low vowel words, and the other in high, so one would be
ek and the other
ak, or
as and
es.
To make an example for the whole concept, they could write
magyar, just like this:
magyr, or
mgyr, and would make sense to them.
But we could vocalize a low vowel word with high pitched vowels and would still make sense. In fact in Latin lang scripts the name of one of the tribes was written as
megyer, and this tribe is the one that give the name
magyar to our people. So even this doesn't matter.
If there are two words which differ only in vowels, like
magyar and
mogyoró (= hazel), then when leaving out the vowels the context would give the meaning.
I dunno why it become customary to write vowels with our Latin alphabet, we could do without them just fine. Mostly.