Alphabet Tibétain
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ཀLettre tibétaine ka
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ཁLettre tibétaine kha
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གLettre tibétaine ga
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ངLettre tibétaine nga
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ཅLettre tibétaine ca
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ཆLettre tibétaine cha
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ཇLettre tibétaine ja
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ཉLettre tibétaine ña
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ཏLettre tibétaine ta
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ཐLettre tibétaine tha
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དLettre tibétaine da
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ནLettre tibétaine na
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པLettre tibétaine pa
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ཕLettre tibétaine pha
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བLettre tibétaine ba
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མLettre tibétaine ma
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ཙLettre tibétaine tsa
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ཚLettre tibétaine tsha
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ཛLettre tibétaine dza
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ཝLettre tibétaine wa
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ཞLettre tibétaine zha
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ཟLettre tibétaine za
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འLettre tibétaine 'a
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ཡLettre tibétaine ya
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རLettre tibétaine ra
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ལLettre tibétaine la
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ཤLettre tibétaine sha
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སLettre tibétaine sa
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ཧLettre tibétaine ha
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ཨLettre tibétaine a
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ཀྵLettre tibétaine kssa
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ཪLettre tibétaine ra à forme fixe *
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ཫLettre tibétaine kka
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ཬLettre tibétaine rra
Description
The Tibetan alphabet was created based on the Indian script known as Siddhamatrika 11580–115C9 in the 7th century. It is classified as an abugida. Each character represents a syllable, consisting of a corresponding consonant and the sound «a.» Other vowels are indicated using diacritical marks above or below the letter, and syllables are separated by dots.
The creation of the Tibetan alphabet is attributed to Thonmi Sambhota. In the mid-7th century, he traveled to India to study the art of writing and, upon his return, presented the alphabet. In the early 9th century, to facilitate the translation of Buddhist scriptures, spelling was standardized. Since then, it has changed very little, while the spoken language has evolved. As a result, the written form has diverged significantly from pronunciation.
For additional Tibetan characters and symbols such as ࿊ and ࿘ , check the Unicode section Tibétain 0F00–0FFF .
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A
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B
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C
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D
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E
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F
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G
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H
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I
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J
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K
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L
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M
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N
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O
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P
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R
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S
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T
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U
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V
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Y
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m