Sajem Tan orthography

Sajem Tan is written with four main orthographies, two native scripts and two romanizations, but other special-purpose writing systems have also been created. There is a well-defined alphabetical order for Sajem Tan, used in all its orthographies, which is d, g, x, j, f, v, ţ, s, z, š, ž, l, r, m, n, a, ë, e, ö, i, y, û, ü, c, t, k, â, ê, o, u.

See also: Sajem Tan.

Jegenţeknoc
Jegenţeknoc is a vertical script for Sajem Tan with both block and cursive forms, created by Stone. The cursive form is known as Kaganţeknoc. It has sometimes been stated that this orthography is used for more formal purposes.

Tözenţeknoc
Created by Fog. It is implied that this writing system would be more suited to everyday writing. Originally, vowels were written as diacritics, but they are now full-height. (note: add chart of Tözenţeknoc with full-height vowels)

Romanizations
Sajem Tan has two related romanizations, known as the Original/Old Orthography and the Reformed Orthography. The differences between them are highlighted in this table:

Reformed Orthography
The Reformed Orthography (Sajem Tan: Jamdanecţeknoc) is the orthography preferred for use in formal settings, including this wiki. It is a 1:1 phoneme-to-grapheme system, although it did contain one digraph, $\langleth\rangle$, for a significant period of time, before it was replaced by $\langleţ\rangle$.

Old Orthography
The Old Orthography (Sajem Tan: Dümdanecţeknoc) is used more often informally, because it can be typed with a standard US keyboard that lacks easy access to diacritics. It uses digraphs to represent phonemes for which there are not single letters in the basic Roman alphabet.

Others
Other proposals for transliterating Sajem Tan into non-Roman alphabets exist. Zek Jafit (Sienna Land) has proposed a Hebrew transliteration, Fog created ones for Greek and Cyrillic, and Žirik (Fish) has made one for xyr conscript Baofusk.