Syriac (Unicode block)

Last updated
Syriac
RangeU+0700..U+074F
(80 code points)
Plane BMP
Scripts Syriac
Major alphabets Estrangela
Serto or West Syriac
Eastern Syriac
Garshuni (Arabic)
Neo-Aramaic
Assigned77 code points
Unused3 reserved code points
Unicode version history
3.0 (1999)71 (+71)
4.0 (2003)77 (+6)
Unicode documentation
Code chart ∣ Web page
Note: [1] [2]

Syriac is a Unicode block containing characters for all forms of the Syriac alphabet, including the Estrangela, Serto, Eastern Syriac, and the Christian Palestinian Aramaic variants. It is used in Literary Syriac, Neo-Aramaic, and Arabic among Syriac-speaking Christians. It was used historically to write Armenian, Persian, Ottoman Turkish, and Malayalam.

Contents

Additional Syriac letters used for writing the Malayalam language are encoded in the Syriac Supplement block.

Unicode chart

Syriac [1] [2]
Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
 0123456789ABCDEF
U+070x܀܁܂܃܄܅܆܇܈܉܊܋܌܍SAM
U+071xܐܑܒܓܔܕܖܗܘܙܚܛܜܝܞܟ
U+072xܠܡܢܣܤܥܦܧܨܩܪܫܬܭܮܯ
U+073xܱܴܷܸܹܻܼܾܰܲܳܵܶܺܽܿ
U+074x݂݄݆݈݀݁݃݅݇݉݊ݍݎݏ
Notes
1. ^ As of Unicode version 15.1
2. ^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points

History

The following Unicode-related documents record the purpose and process of defining specific characters in the Syriac block:

Character list

CodeResultDescription
Punctuation
U+0700܀Syriac End of Paragraph
U+0701܁Syriac Supralinear Full Stop
U+0702܂Syriac Sublinear Full Stop
U+0703܃Syriac Supralinear Colon
U+0704܄Syriac Sublinear Colon
U+0705܅Syriac Horizontal Colon
U+0706܆Syriac Colon skewed left
U+0707܇Syriac Colon skewed right
U+0708܈Syriac Supralinear Colon skewed left
U+0709܉Syriac Sublinear Colon skewed right
U+070A܊Syriac Contraction
U+070B܋Syriac Harklean Obelus
U+070C܌Syriac Harklean Metobelus
U+070D܍Syriac Harklean Asteriscus
U+070F܏ Syriac Abbreviation Mark
Letters
U+0710ܐSyriac Letter Alaph
U+0711ܑSyriac Letter Superscript Alaph
U+0712ܒSyriac Letter Beth
U+0713ܓSyriac Letter Gamal
U+0714ܔSyriac Letter Gamal Garshuni
U+0715ܕSyriac Letter Dalath
U+0716ܖSyriac Letter Dotless Dalath Rish
U+0717ܗSyriac Letter He
U+0718ܘSyriac Letter Waw
U+0719ܙSyriac Letter Zain
U+071AܚSyriac Letter Heth
U+071BܛSyriac Letter Teth
U+071CܜSyriac Letter Teth Garshuni
U+071DܝSyriac Letter Yudh
U+071EܞSyriac Letter Yudh He
U+071FܟSyriac Letter Kaph
U+0720ܠSyriac Letter Lamadh
U+0721ܡSyriac Letter Mim
U+0722ܢSyriac Letter Nun
U+0723ܣSyriac Letter Semkath
U+0724ܤSyriac Letter Final Semkath
U+0725ܥSyriac Letter E
U+0726ܦSyriac Letter Pe
U+0727ܧSyriac Letter Reversed Pe
U+0728ܨSyriac Letter Sadhe
U+0729ܩSyriac Letter Qaph
U+072AܪSyriac Letter Rish
U+072BܫSyriac Letter Shin
U+072CܬSyriac Letter Taw
U+072DܭSyriac Letter Persian Bheth
U+072EܮSyriac Letter Persian Ghamal
U+072FܯSyriac Letter Persian Dhalath
U+074DݍSyriac Letter Sogdian Zhain
U+074EݎSyriac Letter Sogdian Khaph
U+074FݏSyriac Letter Sogdian Fe
Diacritics
U+0730ܰSyriac Pthaha Above
U+0731ܱSyriac Pthaha Below
U+0732ܲSyriac Pthaha Dotted
U+0733ܳSyriac Zqapha Above
U+0734ܴSyriac Zqapha Below
U+0735ܵSyriac Zqapha Dotted
U+0736ܶSyriac Rbasa Above
U+0737ܷSyriac Rbasa Below
U+0738ܸSyriac Dotted Zlama Horizontal
U+0739ܹSyriac Dotted Zlama Angular
U+073AܺSyriac Hbasa Above
U+073BܻSyriac Hbasa Below
U+073CܼSyriac Hbasa-Esata Dotted
U+073DܽSyriac Esasa Above
U+073EܾSyriac Esasa Below
U+073FܿSyriac Rwaha
U+0740݀Syriac Feminine Dot
U+0741݁Syriac Qushshaya
U+0742݂Syriac Rukkakha
U+0743݃Syriac Two Vertical Dots Above
U+0744݄Syriac Two Vertical Dots Below
U+0745݅Syriac Three Dots Above
U+0746݆Syriac Three Dots Below
U+0747݇Syriac Oblique Line Above
U+0748݈Syriac Oblique Line Below
U+0749݉Syriac Music
U+074A݊Syriac Barrekh

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Suriyani Malayalam, also known as Karshoni, Syro-Malabarica or Syriac Malayalam, is a dialect of Malayalam written in a variant form of the Syriac alphabet which was popular among the Saint Thomas Christians of Kerala in India. It uses Malayalam grammar, the Maḏnḥāyā or "Eastern" Syriac script with special orthographic features, and vocabulary from Malayalam and East Syriac. This originated in the South Indian region of the Malabar Coast. Until the 19th century, the script was widely used by Syrian Christians in Kerala.

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References

  1. "Unicode character database". The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  2. "Enumerated Versions of The Unicode Standard". The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2023-07-26.