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Ṭhē

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ṭhē is an additional letter of the Arabic script. It has the basic shape of tāʼ (ت), but with vertical dots, rather than horizontal. It is not used in the Arabic alphabet itself, but is used to represent an aspirated [ʈʰ] in Sindhi, a language mainly spoken in Pakistan. Its Latin description is ṭh,[1] or sometimes t́h.

In an older version of the script, the ٽ‎ was used instead of ٺ‎ and vice versa.

Position in word Isolated Final Medial Initial
Glyph form:
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ٺ ـٺ ـٺـ ٺـ

Sindhi is also written in Devanagari, where the corresponding letter is .

The letter is encoded in the Arabic Unicode block as Tteheh at U+067A.

Unicode code point Unicode-Name Zeichen
U+067A ARABIC LETTER TTEHEH ٺ
U+FB5E ARABIC LETTER TTEHEH ISOLATED FORM
U+FB5F ARABIC LETTER TTEHEH FINAL FORM ـٺ
U+FB60 ARABIC LETTER TTEHEH INITIAL FORM
U+FB61 ARABIC LETTER TTEHEH MEDIAL FORM ـٺـ

References

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  1. ^ Kurzon, Dennis (1 October 2013). "Diacritics and the Perso-Arabic script". Writing Systems Research. 5 (2). Taylor & Francis: 234–243. doi:10.1080/17586801.2013.799451. S2CID 144586999.