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af: Afrikaans
als: Alemannisch
[Alemannic]
am: አማርኛ
[Amharic]
an: aragonés
[Aragonese]
ar: العربية
[Arabic]
arz: مصرى
[Egyptian Arabic]
as: অসমীয়া
[Assamese]
ast: asturianu
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[Azerbaijani]
azb: تۆرکجه
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bar: Boarisch
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bat-smg: žemaitėška
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be: беларуская
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be-tarask: беларуская (тарашкевіца)
[Belarusian (Taraškievica)]
bg: български
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bn: বাংলা
[Bengali]
bpy: বিষ্ণুপ্রিয়া মণিপুরী
[Bishnupriya Manipuri]
br: brezhoneg
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bs: bosanski
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bug: ᨅᨔ ᨕᨘᨁᨗ
[Buginese]
ca: català
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ce: нохчийн
[Chechen]
ceb: Cebuano
ckb: کوردیی ناوەندی
[Kurdish (Sorani)]
cs: čeština
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cv: Чӑвашла
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cy: Cymraeg
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da: dansk
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de: Deutsch
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el: Ελληνικά
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en: English
eo: Esperanto
es: español
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et: eesti
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eu: euskara
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fa: فارسی
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fo: føroyskt
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fr: français
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fy: Frysk
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gd: Gàidhlig
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gl: galego
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gu: ગુજરાતી
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he: עברית
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hi: हिन्दी
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hr: hrvatski
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hsb: hornjoserbsce
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ht: Kreyòl ayisyen
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hu: magyar
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hy: Հայերեն
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ia: interlingua
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id: Bahasa Indonesia
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io: Ido
is: íslenska
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it: italiano
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ja: 日本語
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jv: Basa Jawa
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ka: ქართული
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kk: қазақша
[Kazakh]
kn: ಕನ್ನಡ
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ko: 한국어
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ku: Kurdî
[Kurdish (Kurmanji)]
ky: Кыргызча
[Kirghiz]
la: Latina
[Latin]
lb: Lëtzebuergesch
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li: Limburgs
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lmo: lumbaart
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lt: lietuvių
[Lithuanian]
lv: latviešu
[Latvian]
map-bms: Basa Banyumasan
[Banyumasan]
mg: Malagasy
min: Baso Minangkabau
[Minangkabau]
mk: македонски
[Macedonian]
ml: മലയാളം
[Malayalam]
mn: монгол
[Mongolian]
mr: मराठी
[Marathi]
mrj: кырык мары
[Hill Mari]
ms: Bahasa Melayu
[Malay]
my: မြန်မာဘာသာ
[Burmese]
mzn: مازِرونی
[Mazandarani]
nah: Nāhuatl
[Nahuatl]
nap: Napulitano
[Neapolitan]
nds: Plattdüütsch
[Low Saxon]
ne: नेपाली
[Nepali]
new: नेपाल भाषा
[Newar]
nl: Nederlands
[Dutch]
nn: norsk nynorsk
[Norwegian (Nynorsk)]
no: norsk bokmål
[Norwegian (Bokmål)]
oc: occitan
[Occitan]
or: ଓଡ଼ିଆ
[Oriya]
os: Ирон
[Ossetian]
pa: ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
[Eastern Punjabi]
pl: polski
[Polish]
pms: Piemontèis
[Piedmontese]
pnb: پنجابی
[Western Punjabi]
pt: português
[Portuguese]
qu: Runa Simi
[Quechua]
ro: română
[Romanian]
ru: русский
[Russian]
sa: संस्कृतम्
[Sanskrit]
sah: саха тыла
[Sakha]
scn: sicilianu
[Sicilian]
sco: Scots
sh: srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски
[Serbo-Croatian]
si: සිංහල
[Sinhalese]
simple: Simple English
sk: slovenčina
[Slovak]
sl: slovenščina
[Slovenian]
sq: shqip
[Albanian]
sr: српски / srpski
[Serbian]
su: Basa Sunda
[Sundanese]
sv: svenska
[Swedish]
sw: Kiswahili
[Swahili]
ta: தமிழ்
[Tamil]
te: తెలుగు
[Telugu]
tg: тоҷикӣ
[Tajik]
th: ไทย
[Thai]
tl: Tagalog
tr: Türkçe
[Turkish]
tt: татарча/tatarça
[Tatar]
uk: українська
[Ukrainian]
ur: اردو
[Urdu]
uz: oʻzbekcha/ўзбекча
[Uzbek]
vec: vèneto
[Venetian]
vi: Tiếng Việt
[Vietnamese]
vo: Volapük
wa: walon
[Walloon]
war: Winaray
[Waray]
yi: ייִדיש
[Yiddish]
yo: Yorùbá
[Yoruba]
zh: 中文
[Chinese]
zh-min-nan: Bân-lâm-gú
[Min Nan]
zh-yue: 粵語
[Cantonese]
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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Imperial Aramaic (Unicode block) 11 found (17 total)
alternate case: imperial Aramaic (Unicode block)
Psalter Pahlavi
(221 words)
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release of version 7.0. The Unicode block is U+10B80–U+10BAF: The names are based on the corresponding Imperial Aramaic characters Everson, Michael;
Pahlavi scripts
(3,681 words)
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characteristics noted above. Pahlavi is then an admixture of: written Imperial Aramaic , from which Pahlavi derives its script, logograms, and some of its
Khwarezmian language
(765 words)
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script close to that of Sogdian and Pahlavi with its roots in the Imperial Aramaic script. From the few surviving examples of this script on coins and
Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
(3,834 words)
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the Samaritans. The Talmud described it as the "Libona'a script" (Imperial Aramaic : לִיבּוֹנָאָה, romanized: Lībōnāʾā), translated by some as "Lebanon
Syriac alphabet
(3,290 words)
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Malayalam were added in June, 2017 with the release of version 10.0. The Unicode block for Syriac is U+0700–U+074F: The Syriac Abbreviation (a type of overline)
Inscriptional Parthian
(220 words)
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Parthian uses 22 letters: Letter names are based on the corresponding Imperial Aramaic characters Inscriptional Parthian uses seven standard ligatures: The
Inscriptional Pahlavi
(293 words)
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19 non-joining letters: Letter names are based on the corresponding Imperial Aramaic characters Inscriptional Pahlavi had its own numerals: Numbers are
Palmyrene alphabet
(518 words)
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Everson, Michael (25 August 2007). "N3339: Proposal for encoding the Imperial Aramaic script in the SMP of the UCS" (PDF). Retrieved 6 July 2014. David,
Mandaeism
(10,687 words)
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translated the term manda, from which Mandaiia derives, as "knowledge" (cf. Imperial Aramaic : מַנְדַּע mandaʿ in Daniel 2:21, 4:31, 33, 5:12; cf. Hebrew: מַדַּע
Hatran Aramaic
(2,455 words)
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Chamito-Sémitiques 9 (1960–63): 87–89. Gzella, Holger (2012). "Late Imperial Aramaic ". The Semitic Languages: An International Handbook. Berlin-Boston:
Palmyra
(22,665 words)
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portal Aureliano in Palmira Crisis of the Third Century Palmyrene (Unicode block ) Thirty Tyrants (Roman) Septimius Worod Zabdas The Semitic word T.M