Alfabeto Imperiale aramaico
-
𐡀Imperial Aramaic Letter Aleph
-
𐡁Lettera aramaica imperiale Beth
-
𐡂Imperial Aramaic Letter Gimel
-
𐡃Imperial Aramaic Letter Daleth
-
𐡄Imperial Aramaic Letter He
-
𐡅Imperial Aramaic Letter Waw
-
𐡆Lettera aramaica imperiale Zayin
-
𐡇Lettera aramaica imperiale Heth
-
𐡈Imperial Aramaic Letter Teth
-
𐡉Lettera aramaica imperiale Yodh
-
𐡊Lettera aramaica imperiale Kaph
-
𐡋Lettera aramaica imperiale Lamedh
-
𐡌Imperial Aramaic Letter Mem
-
𐡍Imperial Aramaic Letter Nun
-
𐡎Lettera aramaica imperiale Samekh
-
𐡏Imperial Aramaic Letter Ayin
-
𐡐Imperial Aramaic Letter Pe
-
𐡑Imperial Aramaic Letter Sadhe
-
𐡒Lettera aramaica imperiale Qoph
-
𐡓Imperial Aramaic Letter Resh
-
𐡔Imperial Aramaic Letter Shin
-
𐡕Lettera aramaica imperiale Taw
-
𐡗Segno di sezione aramaico imperiale
-
𐡘Aramaico imperiale numero uno
-
𐡙Imperial Aramaic Number Two
-
𐡚Imperial Aramaic Number Three
-
𐡛Imperial Aramaic Number Ten
-
𐡜Imperial Aramaic Number Twenty
-
𐡝Numero aramaico imperiale cento
-
𐡞Imperial Aramaic Number One Thousand
-
𐡟Aramaico imperiale numero diecimila
Descrizione
The Imperial Aramaic alphabet developed from Fenicio 10900–1091F in the X century BCE. It's actually the ancestor of the key writing systems belonging to Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa. Its descendants include the Brahmi 11000–1104D , , and Hebrew 05D0–05EA alphabets. This widespread influence is due to the Aramaic alphabet being the official script of the Persian Empire. It was used for international diplomatic correspondence.
As a result of the Arab conquests in the 7th century, the Arabic language supplanted the Syriac-Aramaic dialects, and soon the imperial Aramaic alphabet was gradually replaced by the Arabic script.
-
A
-
B
-
C
-
D
-
E
-
F
-
G
-
H
-
I
-
K
-
L
-
M
-
N
-
O
-
P
-
Q
-
R
-
S
-
T
-
U
-
V
-
Y
-
l
-
p
-
s