Alfabeto Khojki
-
๐11200
-
๐11201
-
๐11202
-
๐11203
-
๐11204
-
๐11205
-
๐11206
-
๐11207
-
๐11208
-
๐11209
-
๐1120A
-
๐1120B
-
๐1120C
-
๐1120D
-
๐1120E
-
๐1120F
-
๐11210
-
๐11211
-
11212
-
๐11213
-
๐11214
-
๐11215
-
๐11216
-
๐11217
-
๐11218
-
๐11219
-
๐1121A
-
๐1121B
-
๐1121C
-
๐1121D
-
๐1121E
-
๐1121F
-
๐11220
-
๐ก11221
-
๐ข11222
-
๐ฃ11223
-
๐ค11224
-
๐ฅ11225
-
๐ฆ11226
-
๐ง11227
-
๐จ11228
-
๐ฉ11229
-
๐ช1122A
-
๐ซ1122B
-
๐ฌ1122C
-
๐ญ1122D
-
๐ฎ1122E
-
๐ฏ1122F
-
๐ฐ11230
-
๐ฑ11231
-
๐ฒ11232
-
๐ณ11233
-
๐ด11234
-
๐ต11235
-
๐ถ11236
-
๐ท11237
-
๐ธ11238
-
๐น11239
-
๐บ1123A
-
๐ป1123B
-
๐ผ1123C
-
๐ฝ1123D
Descrizione
Khojki, or Khojiki is an abugida script used formerly and almost exclusively by the Khoja community of parts of the Indian subcontinent such as Sindh. It was employed primarily to record Isma'ili religious literature as well as literature for a few secret Twelver sects. Khojki is belibed being created by Pir Sadardin (daโi Pir Sadruddin) in XV century. Khojki first appears in manuscripts in around 1737 and was thought to have become distinct from the Landa alphabet during the 16th century.
The name ยซKhojkiยป is derived from the Persian word khoje, which means ยซmasterยป, or ยซlordยป.
-
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