Tibetan Subjoined Letter Tsha Letter
ྪ is the Tibetan subjoined letter TSHA (U+0FAA), used as a consonant modifier in Tibetan orthography.
U+0FAA
ྪ is a character from the Tibetan script. It’s specifically a subjoined form of the letter TSHA (Tibetan Subjoined Letter TSHA). Use it when you need the correct subjoined consonant shape in Tibetan text.
Tibetan Subjoined Letter Tsha Letter Meaning
The character “ྪ” is the Tibetan Subjoined Letter TSHA, encoded at U+0FAA. In Tibetan writing, “subjoined” letters are used as consonant components that attach under another letter. This helps represent sounds and grammatical constructions as part of the syllable structure. Because it is a subjoined form, it typically appears in contexts where placement matters visually and typographically—especially when rendering correct Tibetan syllables. When copying, make sure your font supports Tibetan and that your text engine preserves the exact Unicode codepoint.
Common uses
- •Typing or pasting correct Tibetan syllables that include a subjoined TSHA consonant
- •Proofreading Tibetan text where consonant subjoined forms must match exactly
- •Linguistic notes and transliteration aids that refer to Tibetan orthographic components
- •Designing multilingual documents or labels that contain Tibetan script accurately
- •Developing or testing software rendering Tibetan script (Unicode U+0FAA)
Examples
ྪ Tibetan Subjoined Letter TSHA
- ྪྪ used inside a Tibetan syllable as a subjoined consonant
- ྪCopying ཀྪ style syllable parts where TSHA is subjoined
- ྪA dictionary entry showing the subjoined TSHA letter: ྪ
- ྪA text sample mixing Tibetan letters where placement is important: ཡྪ
- ྪUser-generated content that includes the exact character: ྪ
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+0FAA | |
| HTML Entity | ྪ | |
| HTML Code | ྪ | |
| CSS | \0FAA |
FAQ
What does the Tibetan Subjoined Letter Tsha letter mean?
The character “ྪ” is the Tibetan Subjoined Letter TSHA, encoded at U+0FAA. In Tibetan writing, “subjoined” letters are used as consonant components that attach under another letter. This helps represent sounds and grammatical constructions as part of the syllable structure. Because it is a subjoined form, it typically appears in contexts where placement matters visually and typographically—especially when rendering correct Tibetan syllables. When copying, make sure your font supports Tibetan and that your text engine preserves the exact Unicode codepoint.
What Unicode character is this?
“ྪ” is TIBETAN SUBJOINED LETTER TSHA, Unicode codepoint U+0FAA.
How do I copy it reliably?
Copy the character “ྪ” directly from this page. When possible, paste into an environment that supports Tibetan script (Unicode).
Is this the same as the regular Tibetan letter TSHA?
No. This character is specifically the subjoined form (Tibetan Subjoined Letter TSHA), which is used under a base letter in Tibetan syllable structure.
Will it display correctly in all fonts?
Not always. You need a font that supports Tibetan script and the specific shaping required for subjoined letters.