Letters in different scripts

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Phoenician (middle) and its descendants' letters.

This is a chart of how letters look in different languages.

For each letter there is an image, and under the image, in parentheses, is the equivalent Unicode character (for copypasting). If you have a suitable font installed on your device, the Unicode character should look similar or identical to the character in the image. (otherwise you may see boxes, question marks or other placeholder characters)

Chart[change | change source]

Letters in different writing systems
Script f j w
Adlam (πž€€) (πž€‰) (πž€‹) (𞀌) (πž€“) (πž€„) (πž€•) (𞀁) (𞀊) (𞀘) (πž€–) (πž€”) (πž€‘) (πž€‚) (πž€ƒ) (𞀐) (πž€†) (πž€—) (𞀈) (πž€…) (𞀚) (𞀜) (𞀏) (𞀝) (πž€’) (𞀟)
Caucasian Albanian (𐔰) (𐔴) (𐔼) (𐕒) (𐔱) (𐔳) (𐕔) (𐔲) (𐕆) (𐔺) (𐕣) (𐔾) (π•Œ) (π•Ž) (𐕒) (𐕇) (𐕙) (π•š) (𐔸) (𐕛) (𐕑) (𐕀) (π•ž) (𐔡)
Arabic

(Ψ§)

(Ψ¨) (Ψ―) (ف) (Ω‡) (Ωƒ) (Ω„) (Ω…) (Ω†) (Ω‚) (Ψ±) (Ψ³) (Ψͺ) (و) (ي) (Ψ²)
Imperial Aramaic (𐑀) (𐑁) (𐑃) (𐑂) (𐑄) (𐑉) (𐑊) (𐑋) (𐑌) (𐑍) (𐑐) (𐑒) (𐑓) (𐑔) (𐑕) (𐑅) (𐑆)