Persian alphabet
0 sources
Persian alphabet
Summary
Persian alphabet is an Arabic-script alphabet[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of arabic_script_alphabet entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,787 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Persian alphabet's instance of is recorded as Arabic-script alphabet[3].
- Persian alphabet's based on is recorded as Arabic alphabet[4].
- Persian alphabet was followed by Urdu alphabet[5].
- Persian alphabet was followed by Pashto alphabet[6].
- Persian alphabet was followed by Uyghur Arabic alphabet[7].
- Persian alphabet was followed by Ottoman Turkish alphabet[8].
- Persian alphabet was followed by Xiao'erjing[9].
- Persian alphabet was followed by Shahmukhi[10].
- Persian alphabet is a type of Arabic script[11].
- Persian alphabet's Commons category is recorded as Persian alphabet[12].
- Persian alphabet's language of work or name is recorded as Persian[13].
- Persian alphabet comprises ا[14].
- Persian alphabet comprises ب[15].
- Persian alphabet comprises Pe[16].
- Persian alphabet comprises ت[17].
- Persian alphabet comprises ث[18].
- Persian alphabet comprises ج[19].
- Persian alphabet comprises چ[20].
- Persian alphabet comprises ح[21].
- Persian alphabet comprises خ[22].
- Persian alphabet comprises د[23].
- Persian alphabet comprises ذ[24].
- Persian alphabet comprises ر[25].
- Persian alphabet comprises ز[26].
- Persian alphabet comprises ژ[27].
Body
Definition and Type
Persian alphabet's instance of is recorded as Arabic-script alphabet[3]. It is a type of Arabic script[11].
Use and Application
Components include ا[14], an Unicode character[28]; ب[15], an Unicode character[29]; Pe[16], an Arabic letter[30]; ت[17], an Unicode character[31]; ث[18], an Unicode character[32]; and ج[19], an Unicode character[33].
Why It Matters
Persian alphabet ranks in the top 4% of arabic_script_alphabet entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,787 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 25 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34] It is known by 40 alternative names across languages and contexts.[35]