Tibet alfabesi
-
ཀTibet mektubu Ka
-
ཁTibet Mektubu Kha
-
གTibet mektubu Ga
-
ངTibet Mektubu Nga
-
ཅTibet mektubu Ca
-
ཆTibet Mektubu Cha
-
ཇTibet Mektubu Ja
-
ཉTibet Mektubu Nya
-
ཏTibet Mektubu Ta
-
ཐTibet Mektubu Tha
-
དTibet mektubu Da
-
ནTibet harfi Na
-
པTibet Mektubu Pa
-
ཕTibet Mektubu Pha
-
བTibet Mektubu Ba
-
མTibet Mektubu Ma
-
ཙTibet mektubu Tsa
-
ཚTibet Mektubu Tsha
-
ཛTibet Mektubu Dza
-
ཝTibet Mektubu Wa
-
ཞTibet mektubu Zha
-
ཟTibet mektubu Za
-
འTibet Mektubu -A
-
ཡTibet Mektubu Ya
-
རTibet Mektubu Ra
-
ལTibet mektubu La
-
ཤTibet Mektubu Sha
-
སTibet harfi sa
-
ཧTibet harfi ha
-
ཨTibet A harfi
-
ཀྵTibet mektubu Kssa
-
ཪTibet Mektubu Sabit Formlu Ra
-
ཫTibet mektubu Kka
-
ཬTibet Mektubu Rra
Açıklama
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 Tibetçe 0F00–0FFF .
-
A
-
B
-
C
-
D
-
E
-
F
-
G
-
H
-
I
-
J
-
K
-
L
-
M
-
N
-
O
-
P
-
R
-
S
-
T
-
U
-
V
-
Y
-
Ç
-
İ
-
Ş