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== Written representations == === South Asia === [[File:Shiva as the Lord of Dance LACMA edit.jpg|thumb|Statue depicting [[Shiva]] as the [[Nataraja]] dancing in a posture resembling the Devangari ligature for ''Om''; [[Joseph Campbell]] argued that the [[Nataraja]] statue represents ''Om'' as a symbol of the entirety of "consciousness, universe" and "the message that God is within a person and without"<ref>Joseph Campbell (1949), ''[[The Hero with a Thousand Faces]]'', 108f.</ref>]] [[Nāgarī script|Nagari]] or [[Devanagari]] representations are found [[Epigraphy|epigraphically]] on sculpture dating from [[Medieval India]] and on ancient coins in regional scripts throughout South Asia. ''Om'' is represented in [[Devanagari]] as '''{{lang|sa|ओम्}}''', composed of four elements: the [[Devanagari#Vowels|vowel letter]] {{script|Deva|अ}}{{nbsp}}({{IAST|a}}), the [[Devanagari#Vowel diacritics|vowel diacritic]] {{script|Deva|ो}}{{nbsp}}({{IAST|o}}), the [[Devanagari#Consonants|consonant letter]] {{script|Deva|म}}{{nbsp}}({{IAST|m}}), and the ''[[virama]]'' stroke {{script|Deva|्}} which indicates the absence of an implied final vowel. Historically, the combination {{script|Deva|ओ}} represented a diphthong, often transcribed as {{IAST|au}}, but it now represents a long vowel, {{IAST|ō}}. (See [[#Pronunciation|above]].) The syllable is sometimes written '''{{lang|sa|ओ३म्}}''', where {{script|Deva|३}} (i.e., the digit "3") explicitly indicates ''[[Pluti|pluta]]'' ('three times as long') which is otherwise only implied. For this same reason ''Om'' may also be written '''{{lang|hi|ओऽम्}}''' in languages such as [[Hindi]], with the {{IAST|[[avagraha]]}} ({{script|Deva|ऽ}}) being used to indicate prolonging the vowel sound. (However, this differs from the usage of the {{IAST|avagraha}} in [[Sanskrit]], where it would instead indicate the [[prodelision]] of the initial vowel.) ''Om'' may also be written '''{{lang|hi|ओं}}''', with an {{IAST|[[Anusvara|anusvāra]]}} reflecting the pronunciation of {{IPA|sa|õː|}} in languages such as Hindi. In languages such as [[Urdu]] and [[Sindhi language|Sindhi]] ''Om'' may be written '''{{script|Arab|اوم}}''' in [[Arabic script]], although speakers of these languages may also use Devanagari representations. The commonly seen representation of the syllable ''Om,'' '''{{lang|sa|{{large|ॐ}}}}''', is a [[cursive]] [[Typographic ligature|ligature]] in [[Devanagari]], combining {{script|Deva|अ}}{{nbsp}}({{IAST|a}}) with {{script|Deva|उ}}{{nbsp}}({{IAST|u}}) and the [[chandrabindu]] ([[ँ]],{{nbsp}}{{IAST|ṃ}}). In [[Unicode]], the symbol is encoded at {{unichar|0950|Devanagari OM|ulink=Devanagari (Unicode block)}} and at {{unichar|1f549|OM Symbol|ulink=Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs}} as a "generic symbol independent of Devanagari font".<ref>https://unicodeplus.com/U+095 0 Unicode Character "ॐ" (U+0950) </ref> In some South Asian [[writing system]]s, the ''Om'' symbol has been simplified further. In [[Bengali–Assamese script|Bengali and Assamese]] ''Om'' is written simply as '''{{script|Beng|ওঁ}}''' without an additional curl. In languages such as [[Bengali language|Bengali]] differences in pronunciation compared to Sanskrit have made the addition of a curl for {{IAST|u}} redundant. Although the spelling is simpler, the pronunciation remains {{IPA|bn|õː|}}. Similarly, in [[Odia script|Odia]] ''Om'' is written as '''{{script|Orya|ଓଁ}}''' without an additional diacritic. In [[Tamil script|Tamil]], ''Om'' is written as {{script|Taml|ௐ}}, a ligature of {{lang|ta|ஓ}} (''ō'') and {{lang|ta|ம்}} (''m''), while in [[Kannada script|Kannada]], [[Telugu script|Telugu]], and [[Malayalam script|Malayalam]], ''Om'' is written simply as the letter for ''ō'' followed by {{IAST|anusvāra}} ({{lang|kn|ಓಂ}}, {{lang|te|ఓం}}, and {{lang|ml|ഓം}}, respectively). There have been proposals that the ''Om'' syllable may already have had written representations in [[Brahmi script]], dating to before the [[Common Era]]. A proposal by Deb (1921) held that the ''[[swastika]]'' is a [[monogram]]matic representation of the syllable ''Om'', wherein two Brahmi /o/ characters ({{unichar|11011|Brahmi letter O}}) were superposed crosswise and the 'm' was represented by dot.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Deb |first=Harit Krishna |title=The Svastika and the Oṁkāra |year=1921 |journal=Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal |volume=17 |number=3 |pages=231–247 |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/97555#page/313/}}</ref> A commentary in ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'' (1922) considers this theory questionable and unproven.<ref>{{Cite journal |date=September 1922 |title=Research Items: The Swastika, Gammadion, Fylfot |journal=Nature |volume=110 |issue=2758 |page=365 |doi=10.1038/110365a0 |s2cid=4114094 |issn=0028-0836|doi-access=free }} {{Google books|1bMzAQAAMAAJ|The Swastika|page=PA365}}</ref> [[A. B. Walawalkar]] (1951) proposed that ''Om'' was represented using the Brahmi symbols for "A", "U", and "M" ({{script|Brah|𑀅𑀉𑀫}}), and that this may have influenced the unusual [[epigraphic]]al features of the symbol {{script|Deva|ॐ}} for ''Om''.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Roy |first=Ankita |year=2011 |title=Rediscovering the Brahmi Script |url=http://www.mrane.com/images/bramhi.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151003025656/https://mrane.com/images/bramhi.pdf |archive-date=3 October 2015 |publisher=Industrial Design Center, IDC, IIT |location=Bombay}} See the section, "Ancient Symbols".</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kak |first=SC |year=1990 |title=Indus and Brahmi: Further Connections |journal=Cryptologia |volume=14 |issue=2 |pages=169–183|doi=10.1080/0161-119091864878 }}</ref> [[Henry Parker (author)|Parker]] (1909) wrote that an "Aum monogram", distinct from the swastika, is found among [[Tamil-Brahmi]] [[Tamil inscriptions in Sri Lanka|inscriptions in Sri Lanka]],<ref>{{Cite book |last=Parker |first=Henry |author-link=Henry Parker (author) |title=Ancient Ceylon |year=1909 |page=[https://archive.org/details/ancientceylon00hpar/page/428/ 428]}}</ref> including [[Anuradhapura Kingdom|Anuradhapura era]] coins, dated from the 1st to 4th centuries CE, which are embossed with ''Om'' along with other symbols.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Parker |first=Henry |title=Ancient Ceylon |year=1909 |page=[https://archive.org/details/ancientceylon00hpar/page/490/ 490]}}</ref> === East and Southeast Asia === The ''Om'' symbol, with [[epigraphic]]al variations, is also found in many [[Southeast Asia]]n countries. In [[Southeast Asia]], the ''Om'' symbol is widely conflated with that of the [[unalome]]; originally a representation of the Buddha's [[urna]] curl and later a symbol of the path to [[nirvana]], it is a popular [[yantra]] in Southeast Asia, particularly in [[Cambodia]] and [[Thailand]]. It frequently appears in [[Yantra tattooing|''sak yant'']] religious tattoos, and has been a part of various flags and official emblems such as in the [[Royal Standard of Thailand#Fourth reign|Thong Chom Klao]] of [[Mongkut|King Rama IV]] ({{reign|1851|1868}})<ref>Deborah Wong (2001), ''Sounding the Center: History and Aesthetics in Thai Buddhist Performance'', [[University of Chicago Press]], {{ISBN|978-0226905853}}, page 292</ref> and the present-day [[royal arms of Cambodia]].<ref>James Minahan (2009), ''The Complete Guide to National Symbols and Emblems'', {{ISBN|978-0313344961}}, pages 28-29</ref> The [[Khmer people|Khmer]] adopted the symbol since the 1st century during the [[Funan|Kingdom of Funan]], where it is also seen on artefacts from [[Angkor Borei and Phnom Da|Angkor Borei]], once the capital of Funan. The symbol is seen on numerous Khmer statues from [[Chenla]] to [[Khmer Empire]] periods and still in used until the present day.<ref>{{Cite web |title=ឱម: ប្រភពនៃរូបសញ្ញាឱម |url=http://www.hamsanaga.me/2018/01/aum02.html |access-date=2020-08-17}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=ឱម : អំណាចឱមនៅក្នុងសាសនា |url=http://www.hamsanaga.me/2018/01/aum01.html |access-date=2020-08-17}}</ref>{{better source needed|reason=Khmer language blog articles; historical claims need scholarly sources, preferably in English|date=August 2021}} In [[Chinese characters]], ''Om'' is typically [[transliteration|transliterated]] as either [[:wikt:唵|唵]] ({{lang-zh|p=ǎn}}) or [[:wikt:嗡|嗡]] ({{lang-zh|p=wēng}}). === Representation in various scripts === ==== Northern Brahmic ==== {| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; margin: 10pt;" ! Script ! Unicode ! Image |- | [[Bengali–Assamese script|Bengali-Assamese]] | {{script|Deva|ওঁ}} | [[File:Bengali Om.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Devanagari]] | {{script|Deva|ॐ}} | [[File:Aum Om black.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Devanagari]] | {{script|Deva|ओम्}} | [[File:Devanagari_AUM_ओम्.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Devanagari]] ([[Jain symbol]]) | ꣽ | [[File:Om jaïn black.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Gurmukhi]] ([[Ik Onkar]]) | {{script|Guru|ੴ}} | [[File:Ek_onkar.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Gurmukhi]] ([[Ik Onkar]]) | {{script|Guru|ੴ}} | [[File:EK ONKAR GURMUKHÎ 0A74.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Lepcha script|Lepcha]] | {{script|Lepc|ᰣᰨᰵ}} | [[File:Lepcha Om.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Limbu script|Limbu]] | {{script|Limb|ᤀᤥᤱ}} | [[File:Limbu Om.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Meitei script|Meitei Mayek]] (Anji) | {{script|Mtei|ꫲ}} | [[File:Om - Anji in Meetei Mayek.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Modi script|Modi]] | {{script|Modi|𑘌𑘽}} | [[File:Om in Modi script.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Odia script|Odia]] | {{script|Orya|ଓଁ}} | [[File:Odia Om symbol.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Odia script|Odia]] | {{script|Orya|ଓଁ}} | [[File:Odia Om sign.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[ʼPhags-pa script|ʼPhags-pa]] | {{Phagspa|v|ꡝꡡꡏ}}{{efn|As used in the [[Stele of Sulaiman]], dated to 1348.}} | |- | [[Pracalit script|Pracalit]] | {{script|Newa|𑑉}} | [[File:Om in Pracalit(Newa) script.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Ranjana script|Ranjana]] | | [[File:Ranjana om.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Sharada script|Sharada]] | {{script|Shrd|𑇄}} | [[File:Om in Sharada script.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Siddhaṃ script|Siddham]] | {{script|Sidd|𑖌𑖼}} | [[File:Om in Siddham script.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Soyombo script|Soyombo]] | {{script|Soyo|𑩐𑩖𑪖}} | [[File:Soyombo Om symbol.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Takri script|Takri]] | {{script|Takr|𑚈𑚫}} | [[File:Om in Takri script.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Tibetan script|Tibetan]] ([[Uchen script|Uchen]]) |{{efn|{{bo-textonly|ༀ}}}} | [[File:TibAum.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Tirhuta script|Tirhuta, Mithilakshar]] | {{script|Tirh|𑓇}} | [[File:Om in Tirhuta script.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Zanabazar square script|Zanabazar]] | {{script|Tirh|𑨀𑨆𑨵}} | |} <!-- {{Gallery |title=''Om'' in [[Brahmic scripts#Northern Brahmic|Northern Brahmic scripts]] |width=100 |height=100 |align=center |File:Aum Om black.svg| [[Devanagari]] ligature,{{efn|{{script|Deva|ॐ}} (U+0950)}} [[Gujarati script|Gujarati]]{{efn|{{script|Gujr|ૐ}} (U+0AD0)}} |File:Devanagari_AUM_ओम्.svg| [[Devanagari]]{{efn|{{script|Deva|ओम्}} (U+0913 & U+092E & U+094D)}} ([[#South Asia|see above]] for variants) |File:Om symbol1.svg| [[Bengali–Assamese script|Bengali, Assamese]]{{efn|{{script|Beng|ওঁ}} (U+0993 & U+0981)}} |File:Ek_onkar.svg| [[Gurmukhi]]{{efn|{{script|Guru|ੴ}} (U+0A74)}}, [[Ik Onkar]] |File:EK ONKAR GURMUKHÎ 0A74.svg| [[Gurmukhi]] cursive variant, [[Ik Onkar]] |File:Om jaïn orange.svg| [[Jain symbols|Jain symbol]]{{efn|ꣽ (U+A8FD)}} |File:Lepcha Om.svg| [[Lepcha script|Lepcha]]{{efn|{{script|Lepc|ᰣᰨᰵ}} (U+1C23 & U+1C28 & U+1C35)}} |File:Limbu Om.svg| [[Limbu script|Limbu]]{{efn|{{script|Limb|ᤀᤥᤱ}} (U+1900 & U+1925 & U+1931)}} |File:Om - Anji in Meetei Mayek.svg| [[Meitei script|Meitei Mayek]], Anji symbol{{efn|{{script|Mtei|ꫲ}} (U+AAF2)}} |File:Om in Modi script.svg| [[Modi script|Modi]]{{efn|{{script|Modi|𑘌𑘽}} (U+1160C & U+1163D)}} |File:Odia Om symbol.png| [[Odia script|Odia]]{{efn|{{script|Orya|ଓଁ}} (U+0B13 & U+0B01)}} |File:Odia Om sign.svg| [[Odia script|Odia]] cursive variant{{efn|{{script|Orya|ଓଁ}} (U+0B13 & U+200D & U+0B01)}} |File:Om in Pracalit(Newa) script.svg| [[Pracalit script|Prachalit]]{{efn|{{script|Newa|𑑉}} (U+11449)}} |File:Shukla Ranjana Om.svg| [[Ranjana script|Ranjana]] |File:Om in Sharada script.svg| [[Sharada script|Sharada]]{{efn|{{script|Shrd|𑇄}} (U+111C4)}} |File:Om in Siddham script.svg| [[Siddhaṃ script|Siddham]]{{efn|{{script|Sidd|𑖌𑖼}} (U+1158C & U+115BC)}} |File:Soyombo Om symbol.svg| [[Soyombo script|Soyombo]]{{efn|{{script|Soyo|𑩐𑩖𑪖}} (U+11A50 & U+11A55 & U+11A96)}} |File:Om in Takri script.svg| [[Takri script|Takri]]{{efn|{{script|Takr|𑚈𑚫}} (U+11688 & U+116AB)}} |File:Om tibetain-red.svg| [[Tibetan script|Tibetan]]{{efn|{{bo-textonly|ༀ}} (U+0F00)}} |File:Om in Tirhuta script.svg| [[Tirhuta script|Tirhuta, Mithilakshar]]{{efn|{{script|Tirh|𑓇}} (U+114C7)}} }} --> ==== Southern Brahmic ==== {| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; margin: 10pt;" ! Script ! Unicode ! Image |- | [[Balinese script|Balinese]] | {{script|Bali|ᬒᬁ}} | [[File:Modre symbol Omkara.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Burmese script|Burmese]] | {{script|Mymr|ဥုံ}} | [[File:Om in Burmese script.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Chakma script|Chakma]] | {{script|Cakm|𑄃𑄮𑄀}} | [[File:Om in Chakma script.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Cham script|Cham]] | {{script|Cham|ꨅꩌ}} | [[File:Om in Cham script.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Cham script|Cham]] (Homkar) | {{script|Cham|ꨀꨯꨱꩌ}} | [[File:Cham Homkar (Om) symbol.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Grantha script|Grantha]] |{{efn|{{script|Gran|𑍐}}}} | [[File:Om in Grantha script.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Javanese script|Javanese]] | {{script|Java|ꦎꦴꦀ}} | [[File:Simbol aum.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Kannada script|Kannada]] | {{script|Knda|ಓಂ}} | [[File:Kannada OM.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Kawi script|Kawi]] | {{Script|Kawi|𑼐𑼀}} | [[File:KAWI_LETTER_OM.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Khmer script|Khmer]] | {{script|Khmr|ឱំ}} | [[File:Om in Khmer script.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Khmer script|Khmer]] ([[Unalome]]) | {{script|Khmr|៚}} | [[File:Khmer Sacred Symbol, Om or Unalom.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Lao script|Lao]] | {{script|Laoo|ໂອໍ}} | [[File:Om in Lao script.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Malayalam script|Malayalam]] | {{script|Mlym|ഓം}} | [[File:Malayalam Om.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Sinhala script|Sinhala]] | {{script|Sinh|ඕම්}} | [[File:Sinhala Om symbol.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Sundanese script|Sundanese]] | {{script|Sund|ᮇᮀ}} | |- | [[Tai Tham script|Tai Lanna]] | {{Script|Lana|ᩒᩴ}} | |- | [[Tamil script|Tamil]] | {{script|Taml|ௐ}} | [[File:Tamil Om.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Telugu script|Telugu]] |{{efn|{{script|Telu|ఓం}}}} | [[File:Om in telugu.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Thai script|Thai]] | {{script|Thai|โอํ}} | [[File:Thai Om symbol.png|center|40px]] |- | [[Thai script|Thai]] (Khomut) | {{script|Thai|๛}} | [[File:Thai Khomut symbol.svg|center|40px]] |} <!-- {{Gallery |title=''Om'' in [[Brahmic scripts#Southern Brahmic|Southern Brahmic scripts]] |width=100 |height=100 |align=center |File:Bali Omkara Red.png| [[Balinese script|Balinese]]{{efn|{{script|Bali|ᬒᬁ}} (U+1B12 & U+1B01)}} |File:Om in Burmese script.png| [[Burmese script|Burmese]]{{efn|{{script|Mymr|ဥုံ}} (U+1025 & U+102F & U+1036)}} |File:Om in Chakma script.svg| [[Chakma script|Chakma]]{{efn|{{script|Cakm|𑄃𑄮𑄀}} (U+11103 & U+1112E & U+11100)}} |File:Om in Cham script.png| [[Cham script|Cham]]{{efn|{{script|Cham|ꨯꩌ}} (U+AA05 & U+AA4C)}} |File:Cham Homkar (Om) symbol.svg| [[Cham script|Cham]] ''homkar'' symbol{{efn|{{script|Cham|ꨀꨯꨱꩌ}} (U+AA00 & U+AA2F & U+AA31 & U+AA4C)}} |File:Om in Grantha script.svg| [[Grantha script|Grantha]]{{efn|{{script|Gran|𑍐}} (U+11350)}} |File:Simbol aum.png| [[Javanese script|Javanese]]{{efn|{{script|Java|ꦎꦴꦀ}} (U+A98E & U+A980 & U+A9B4)}} |File:Kannada OM.svg| [[Kannada script|Kannada]]{{efn|{{script|Knda|ಓಂ}} (U+0C93 & U+0C82)}} |File:Om in Khmer script.png| [[Khmer script|Khmer]]{{efn|{{script|Khmr|ឱំ}} (U+17B1 & U+17C6)}} |File:Khmer Sacred Symbol, Om or Unalom.svg| [[Khmer script|Khmer]] ''Aom, [[Unalome|Unalaom]],'' or ''Komutr'' symbol{{efn|{{script|Khmr|៚}} (U+17DA)}} |File:Om in Lao script.png| [[Lao script|Lao]]{{efn|{{script|Laoo|ໂອໍ}} (U+0EAD & U+0EC2 & U+0ECD)}} |File:Ohm Malayalam.png| [[Malayalam script|Malayalam]]{{efn|{{script|Mlym|ഓം}} (U+0D13 & U+0D02)}} |File:Sinhala Om symbol.svg| [[Sinhala script|Sinhala]]{{efn|{{script|Sinh|ඕං}} (U+0D95 & U+0D82)}} |File:Tamil Om.svg| [[Tamil script|Tamil]]{{efn|{{script|Taml|ௐ}} (U+0BD0)}} |File:Om in telugu.svg| [[Telugu script|Telugu]]{{efn|{{script|Telu|ఓం}} (U+0C13 & U+0C02)}} |File:Thai Om symbol.png| [[Thai script|Thai]]{{efn|{{script|Thai|โอํ}} (U+0E2D & U+0E42 & U+0E4D)}} |File:Thai Khomut symbol.svg| [[Thai script|Thai]] ''Om, [[Unalome]],'' or ''Khomut'' symbol{{efn|{{script|Thai|๛}} (U+0E5B)}} }} --> ==== Non-Brahmic ==== {| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; margin: 10pt;" ! Script ! Unicode ! Image |- | [[Latin alphabet|Latin]] | {{script|Latin|Ōm̐}} | |- | [[Arabic script|Arabic]] | {{nq|اوم}}{{efn|Used for example in [[Urdu]] and [[Sindhi language|Sindhi]], although speakers of these languages may also use Brahmic representation such as Devanagari.}} | |- | [[Chinese characters|Chinese]] | {{script|Hant|{{linktext|唵}}}} | [[File:Om cinese.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Hangul]] | {{script|Hang|옴}} | [[File:Korean Om.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Kanji]] | {{linktext|阿吽}} | |- | [[Katakana]] | {{script|Kana|オーム}} | [[File:Om in Katakana(Japanese).svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Manchu script|Manchu]] | {{MongolUnicode|ᢀᠣ}} | |- | [[Mongolian script|Mongolian]] ([[Galik alphabet|Ali Gali]]) | {{MongolUnicode|ᢀᠣᠸᠠ}} | [[File:Om in Mongolian script.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Tangut script|Tangut]] | {{Tangut|𗙫}}{{efn|As used in the [[Stele of Sulaiman]], dated to 1348.}} | [[File:TANGUT IDEOGRAPH-1766B.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Thaana]] | {{script|Thaa|އޮމ}} | [[File:OM_in_divehi.svg|center|40px]] |- | [[Warang Citi]] | {{script|Wara|𑣿}} | [[File:Shukla Warang Citi Om.svg|center|40px]] |} <!-- +{{Gallery |title=''Om'' in East Asian scripts |width=100 |height=100 |align=center |File:| [[Chinese characters|Chinese]]{{efn| (U+5535)}} |File:| [[Hangul]]{{efn| (U+C634)}} |File:Om in Katakana(Japanese).svg| [[Katakana]]{{efn|{{script|Kana|オーム}} (U+30AA & U+30FC & U+30E0)}} |File:Om in Mongolian script.svg| [[Mongolian script|Mongolian]]{{efn|{{script|Mong|ᢀᠣᠸᠠ}} (U+1826 & U+1838 & U+1820 & U+1880)}} }} ==== Other ==== {{Gallery |title=''Om'' in other scripts |width=100 |height=100 |align=center |File:OM_in_divehi.svg| [[Thaana]]{{efn|{{script|Thaa|އޮމ}} (U+0787 & U+07AE & U+0789)}} |File:Shukla Warang Citi Om.svg| [[Warang Citi]]{{efn|{{script|Wara|𑣿}} (U+118FF)}} }} -->
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