Imperial Aramaic vs Thai
Writing system comparison · ISO Armi vs ISO Thai
Imperial Aramaic is a Historical Right-to-left script from Middle Eastern (31 Unicode characters) used by 0 languages. Thai is a Living Left-to-right script from Southeast Asian (86 Unicode characters) used by 7 languages. A key difference is reading direction: Imperial Aramaic reads Right-to-left, while Thai reads Left-to-right.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Attribute | Imperial Aramaic | Thai |
|---|---|---|
| ISO Code | Armi | Thai |
| Direction | Right-to-left | Left-to-right |
| Status | Historical | Living |
| Region | Middle Eastern | Southeast Asian |
| Characters | 31 | 86 |
| Languages | 0 | 7 |
| Script Type | Abjad | Abugida |
| Descended From | Phoenician | Khmer |
| Total Speakers | — | ~60M |
| Introduced | 800 BCE | 1283 CE |
| Unicode Ranges |
U+10840–U+1085F
|
U+0E01–U+0E5B
|
Only in Imperial Aramaic
0 languages
None unique
Used by Both
0 languages
No shared languages
More Comparisons
Imperial Aramaic vs Latin
RTL · LTR
Thai vs Latin
LTR · LTR
Imperial Aramaic vs Cyrillic
RTL · LTR
Thai vs Cyrillic
LTR · LTR
Imperial Aramaic vs Devanagari (Nagari)
RTL · LTR
Thai vs Devanagari (Nagari)
LTR · LTR
Imperial Aramaic vs Arabic
RTL · LTR
Thai vs Arabic
LTR · LTR
Imperial Aramaic vs Bengali (Bangla)
RTL · LTR
Thai vs Bengali (Bangla)
LTR · LTR
Imperial Aramaic vs Han (Simplified variant)
RTL · LTR
Thai vs Han (Simplified variant)
LTR · LTR
Imperial Aramaic vs Hebrew
RTL · LTR
Thai vs Hebrew
LTR · LTR
Imperial Aramaic vs Greek
RTL · LTR
Thai vs Greek
LTR · LTR
Data sourced from the ISO 15924 registry, Unicode CLDR, and the Unicode Character Database.