Takri Alphabet
-
𑚀11680
-
𑚁11681
-
𑚂11682
-
𑚃11683
-
𑚄11684
-
𑚅11685
-
𑚆11686
-
𑚇11687
-
𑚈11688
-
𑚉11689
-
𑚊1168A
-
𑚋1168B
-
𑚌1168C
-
𑚍1168D
-
𑚎1168E
-
𑚏1168F
-
𑚐11690
-
𑚑11691
-
𑚒11692
-
𑚓11693
-
𑚔11694
-
𑚕11695
-
𑚖11696
-
𑚗11697
-
𑚘11698
-
𑚙11699
-
𑚚1169A
-
𑚛1169B
-
𑚜1169C
-
𑚝1169D
-
𑚞1169E
-
𑚟1169F
-
𑚠116A0
-
𑚡116A1
-
𑚢116A2
-
𑚣116A3
-
𑚤116A4
-
𑚥116A5
-
𑚦116A6
-
𑚧116A7
-
𑚨116A8
-
𑚩116A9
-
𑚪116AA
-
𑚫116AB
-
𑚬116AC
-
𑚭116AD
-
𑚮116AE
-
𑚯116AF
-
𑚰116B0
-
𑚱116B1
-
𑚲116B2
-
𑚳116B3
-
𑚴116B4
-
𑚵116B5
-
𑚶116B6
-
𑚷116B7
Beschreibung
Takri is an abugida script, which descended from the Brahmi 11000–1104D script. It was used in the Indian princely states of Jammu and Kashmir for the Dogri language and in the western part of the Himalayas. In the 20th century, it was completely replaced by the Devanagari 0915–0945 script and nowadays it is no longer in use.
-
A
-
B
-
C
-
D
-
E
-
F
-
G
-
H
-
I
-
J
-
K
-
L
-
M
-
N
-
O
-
P
-
R
-
S
-
T
-
U
-
V
-
W
-
Y
-
Ä