Tibetan Letter Tha Letter
ཐ is the Tibetan letter THA, Unicode U+0F50, used as part of Tibetan writing.
U+0F50
ཐ (Tibetan letter THA) is a Unicode character from the Tibetan script. It’s commonly needed when working with Tibetan text in documents, web pages, and typography tools. Below you’ll find copy options and practical guidance.
Tibetan Letter Tha Letter Meaning
ཐ is the Tibetan letter THA (Unicode: U+0F50, HTML entity: ཐ). As a letter in the Tibetan script, it represents a consonant sound in written Tibetan. Like many letters in abugida-style scripts, how it behaves in a word depends on surrounding letters, ordering, and orthographic rules used in Tibetan writing systems. When you’re entering text or rendering Tibetan correctly, it’s mainly important to use the exact character (ཐ) rather than a look-alike from another script. For developers, using the correct Unicode code point ensures consistent display across platforms.
Common uses
- •Copying and pasting Tibetan text in notes, drafts, and messages
- •Typography and font testing to verify Tibetan glyph rendering
- •Web and app UI localization where Tibetan characters must display correctly
- •Linguistics or educational materials that list or reference Tibetan letters
- •Text processing and search indexing for Tibetan-script datasets
Examples
ཐ Tibetan letter THA
- ཐསྐད་སྒྲུབ་ལུ་ཐིག་བཞག་ནས ཐ་ བརྗོད།
- ཐདཔེ་ཚན་ནང་ ཐ་ ཡོད།
- ཐཡིག་ཆའི་མགོ་རུ་ ཐ་ བྲིས།
- ཐམིང་གཅིག་ནང་མཚོན་བྱེད་ནི ཐ་ ཡིན།
- ཐཐེད་དུ་བཀོད་པའི་ཡིག་ཚན་ནང་ ཐ་ འདྲེན།
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+0F50 | |
| HTML Entity | ཐ | |
| HTML Code | ཐ | |
| CSS | \0F50 |
FAQ
What is the Unicode code point for ཐ?
The Tibetan letter THA is U+0F50.
How can I copy this character reliably?
Copy the character directly (ཐ) or use the provided HTML entity ཐ or Unicode escape formats.
What does “Tibetan letter THA” mean?
It’s the name of the Unicode character in the Tibetan script; it represents a consonant letter used in Tibetan writing.
Why does it sometimes look different on my screen?
Appearance depends on the font and rendering support for the Tibetan script; using a Unicode-capable font will usually fix missing or mis-styled glyphs.