As far as I know, they have six special characters:

1 - "Ye" with a hat to represent "e:"
2 - "Vav" with a hat to represent "o"
3 - "Lam" with a hat to represent some weird form of "l"
4 - "Vav" with three dots on it to represent "v" (which is different from "w", represented by "Vav" itself). Note the difference with Persian, where there is almost no "w" and "Vav" represents "v".
5 - Tu "Vav"s attached to eachother to represent "u:".
6 - "Re" with a dot beneath it to represent some weird form of "r".


Roozbeh Pournader wrote:

On Fri, 4 Apr 2003, Shervin Afshar wrote:



I believe that Kurdi language has not a written
form and it uses farsi script.



No, you're wrong. It indeed has a written form and has some special
letters only used in Kurdish. I can't point to a specific resource (I am indeed searching for experts), but I have seen Kurdish books.


roozbeh

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