Balinese alphabet

All you want to know about Balinese alphabet

Balinese
Type Abugida
Spoken languages Balinese, Sasak
Time period c. 1000–present
Parent systems Proto-Canaanite alphabet
 → Phoenician alphabet
  → Aramaic alphabet
   → Brāhmī
    → Pallava
     → Old Kawi
      → Balinese
Sister systems Batak
Baybayin
Buhid
Hanunó'o
Javanese
Lontara
Old Sundanese
Rejang
Tagbanwa
Unicode range U+1B00–U+1B7F
ISO 15924 Bali
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

The Balinese script is an abugida that was used to write the Balinese language, an Austronesian language spoken by about three million people on the Indonesian island of Bali. The use of the Balinese alphabet has mostly been replaced by the Roman alphabet. Although it is learned in school, few people use it. It is mostly used in temples and for religious writings.

The Balinese script was derives from the Old Kawi alphabet, which ultimately derived from the Brahmi alphabet, the root of all the Indic and Southeast Asian abugidas.

Like most abugidas, each letter has an inherent vowel of /a/. Other vowels are indicated by using diacritics, which can appear above, below, to the left, or to the right of the consonant.

Basic signs of the Balinese script


Similarities with the Javanese script

The Balinese and Javanese scripts are essentially typographic variants.

Balinese Script
Javanese Script
Balinese script Javanese script

Balinese in Unicode

The Unicode range for Balinese is U+1B00 ... U+1B7F. Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points.

Balinese
Unicode.org chart (PDF)
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+1B0x
U+1B1x
U+1B2x
U+1B3x ᬿ
U+1B4x        
U+1B5x
U+1B6x
U+1B7x      

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