Artistic Forces/Alfebeth

Alfebeth, otherwise known as the Alfebeth Alphabet, the Animatopian Basic, the Animatopian Common Script, the Animatopian Common Alphabet, the Animatopian Basic Alphabet, or the Animatopian Basic Script, is a constructed script and glyphic writing system influentially borrowed from the Greek alphabet, the Latin script (notably basic Latin, English, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, and Esperanto alphabets), the Phoenician alphabet, and Aurebesh from Star Wars, and used for representatively transcribing and writing Animatopian Basic Standard, the widely spoken and written language or lingua franca in the world of Animatopia, as its predominant writing system. In order to provide simple, phonemic orthography and prevent difficulties of conventional spelling and orthography using the Latin alphabet, which makes the words incorrectly pronounced, its characters also have the proper pronunciations using the translingual pronunciations in comparison to the English language.

In some territories like those on Earth, Alfebeth is sometimes used alongside Latin, one of its inspirational scripts.

Like the Shavian alphabet, Cyrillic, and other writing systems, other than Animatopian Basic, Alfebeth is also adaptable to write another language called Esperanto due to its alphabetical letters' proper pronunciations.

Name
The name "Alfebeth" comes from the first two letters of the Alfebeth alphabet: Alfesh, which is alternatively spelled with "esh" replacing "a" in it after the Greek letter "alpha", and Beth, which came from the second Greek letter Beta but the letter at the end of the word is replaced with letter "h". This is similar to the real-word term "alphabet," derived from the first two letters of the Greek alphabet: alpha and beta.

Glyphs
Like the Japanese kanji, consisting of logographic Chinese characters that came from the Chinese script and used for writing Japanese along with hiragana and katakana, the letters, numbers, and symbols of Alfebeth have taken from the elements of Greek, Phoenician, Latin, and Aurebesh alphabets and scripts, including Roman and Chinese numerals. This writing system consists only 56 letters (32 consonants and 24 vowels) and 10 numerals, including symbols and punctuations. Like the logographs of the Japanese katana, most letters of this alphabet are sharp and angular with some of them have curvy features. To indicate the small letters, many of these letters are either rotated by 90 degrees or flipped horizontally and vertically.

Esperanto
In addition to Animatopian Basic Standard, this variant of Alfebeth is an adaptation to the other language called Esperanto. However, as that language has been phonemically spelled, the differences are the pronunciations that completely differ from the English values, including the translingual ones. For the glyphic conversion and transliteration of the Esperanto alphabet from Latin to Alfebeth, here are the letters.

In other languages

 * Chinese: Traditional: 阿爾菲貝斯文字; Simplified: 阿尔菲贝斯文字 (Ā'ěrfēibèisī Wénzì)
 * Japanese: アルフェベス文字 (Arufebesu Moji)
 * Korean: 알페베스 (Alpebeseu)
 * Russian: Алфебет (Alfebet)

Trivia

 * Before Artistic Forces, Alfebeth is a constructed script, used for predominantly transcribing the language known as Animatopian Basic and influenced by a combination of two traditional and one constructed writing systems, most specifically Phoenician, Greek, Latin, and Aurebesh from the Star Wars series as a cultural reference. Its letters, numerals, punctuations, and symbols are derived from these inspirational scripts.
 * The alphabet of Alfebeth is possibly inspired by the IPA and the Shavian alphabet as both have letters with proper pronunciations for the English language as well as Animatopian Basic Standard to avoid the difficulties of conventional spelling using the Latin script.
 * Because of these letters and their proper pronunciations, both Alfebeth and the Shavian alphabet have also adapted to another language: Esperanto.