
[Home Page]
[Language Page]
[Writing Page]
[Evolution of the Latin Alphabet]
[Evolution of Writing Systems]
[Amharic]
[Arabic]
[Aramaic]
[Armenian]
[Bengali]
[Berber]
[Brahmi]
[Burmese]
[Cham]
[Chinese Characters]
[Chinese Pictograms]
[Coptic]
[Cuniform]
[Cyrillic]
[Etruscan]
[Georgian]
[Greek]
[Gujarati]
[Hebrew]
[Hindi]
[Japanese]
[Javanese]
[Kannada]
[Khmer]
[Korean]
[Lao]
[Latin (Roman and Modern)]
[Lepcha]
[Linear B]
[Malayalam]
[Maldivian]
[Mayan]
[Mongolian]
[Nastaliq]
[Oriya]
[Phoenician]
[Punjabi]
[Runic]
[Samaritan]
[Sanskrit]
[Sinhalese]
[Syriac]
[Tamil]
[Telugu]
[Thai]
[Tibetan]
[Tocharian]
[Ugarit]
[Readers' Feedback (Languages)]
Script samples from OmniGlot
|
The Tibetan Syllabary and Numbers
The Consonants

Consonants for Borrowed Words

The Vowels

The Numbers
The Tibetan script is used for the language of the same name spoken in the Tibet region of
China, North India and Nepal. It is derived
from the Devanagari script of Sanskrit.
|
|