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The Persian alphabet (Persian: الفبای فارسی, romanized: Alefbâ-ye Fârsi), also known as the Perso-Arabic script, is the right-to-left alphabet used for the Persian language. It is a variation of the Arabic script with five additional letters: پ چ ژ گ (the sounds 'g', 'zh', 'ch', and 'p', respectively), in addition to the ...
After the Islamic conquest of the Persian Sassanian Empire in the 7th and 8th centuries AD, the Arabic alphabet was adapted to write the Persian language. This is now known as the Persian or Perso-Arabic alphabet ( الفبای فارسی / alefbā-ye fârsi).
In this guide, we’ll take you through each letter of the Farsi alphabet, provide pronunciation tips, and offer practice techniques to help you master reading and writing in Farsi. The Farsi alphabet consists of 32 letters, derived from the Arabic script.
The first is a table of the Persian vowel sounds and the second is a table of all the letters in the Persian alphabet. Click on a row within one of the tables to visit a page with animations showing how to draw that letter in its varying forms.
The Persian alphabet consists of 32 characters, 28 are are similar to Arabic and and 4 additional ones are exclusive to Persian: (P)"پ," (ZH)"ژ," (G)"گ," (CH)"چ". The Persian alphabet is actually a lot easier to learn than you might think.
The Farsi alphabet (Farsi: /alefbâye fârsi/ الفبای فارسی) consists 32 letters, most of which have two forms, short and full. In Farsi, words are written from right to left while numbers are written from left to right.
Persian is read from right to left and consists of 32 letters. Some of the letters have small and big forms, just like A / a in English, while other letters have only one form. Persian also doesn’t have vowels per se, but uses six sounds recognised as vowels that are written under letters to make them readable.
The six vowels and 23 consonants of Persian are written using a modified version of the Arabic alphabet with four extra Persian letters to represent sounds which do not exist in Arabic. Its Persian name is الفبا ‹alefbâ› , which is the equivalent of the English “ABCs”.
Persian alphabet (الفبای فارسی / alefbā-ye fârsi) فارسی) After the Islamic conquest of the Persian Sassanian Empire in 642 AD, Arabic became the language of government, culture and especially religion, and the Arabic alphabet was adapted to write the Persian language.
Persian, also known as Farsi, is an Indo-European language spoken primarily in Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan. The Persian language uses a modified version of the Arabic script with additional letters to accommodate Persian phonetics.