Sinhala Script

Ian James
© August 2010

language name

This is the writing system for the Sinhalese language, spoken on the island of Sri Lanka. It is among the many scripts deriving ultimately from Brahmi, and is certainly one of the loveliest scripts in the world. These images were produced after finding so few large and clear examples of the rather complex (and fussy) letters.

Consonants

Consonants have an inherent /a/. Those with an asterisk * are not used in the pure Sinhalese language, but have been used in the writing of Pali and Sanskrit words. I have made the chart large to enable seeing the glyphs in detail.

Sinhala consonants
Sinhala consonants

Vowels and other marks

Initial (solo) vowels have an independent form. After a consonant, a vowel is written as a symbol after, above, below, before or surrounding the body of that consonant, and the vowel replaces the inherent short /a/. In the last column, a vowel-silencer is seen, along with two other effects common in Pali/Sanskrit. The full stop is an old-fashioned symbol.

Sinhala vowels
Sinhala vowels

Irregular vowel attachments

In some cases of vowel attachment, the shape of the consonant requires a different style from those depicted in the table above.

Sinhala irregular vowels
Sinhala irregular vowels

Kerned and ligature forms

Some common combinations of consecutive consonants are written joined; the first consonant is without a vowel but does not have a vowel-silencer mark.

Sinhala kerns

Other close combinations use special diacritics or completely new forms. These are the ligatures involving medial /r/, /y/ and /v/.

Sinhala ligatures

Sample text

This is a Buddhist verse (actually Pali) from Vinaya Mahavagga I.23:

Sinhala text

Sri Lankan buddha image (anonymous)

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All material on this page © Ian James, unless otherwise stated.
Last modified Nov.19,2010