Do you speak Sinhala or Tamil? Have you noticed any other alphabet similarities? Share in the comments below!

| Sound | Sinhala | Tamil | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Ka (unvoiced) | ක | க | | Kha (aspirated) | ඛ | (not present) | | Ga (voiced) | ග | (uses க with sound change) | | Gha (aspirated voiced) | ඝ | (not present) |

Yet today, on Sri Lankan currency, road signs, and government documents, both scripts sit side by side—a beautiful, functional example of two alphabets that learned to live together.

| Sound | Sinhala | Tamil | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Ja | ජ | ஜ | | Sha | ශ | ஷ | | Sa (palatal) | ෂ | (same as Sha in Tamil) | | Ha | හ | ஹ | | Ksha | ක්ෂ | க்ஷ |

අ ආ ඇ ඈ ඉ ඊ උ ඌ එ ඒ ඔ ඕ Tamil also has 12 independent vowels:

Tamil speakers often pronounce ‘ka,’ ‘ga,’ and ‘kha’ using the same single letter , relying on context. Sinhala uses four distinct letters. The Sweet Spot: Grantha Letters Here’s the most interesting overlap for learners. Both scripts use a special set of letters called Grantha (borrowed from the ancient Grantha script of South India) to write Sanskrit loanwords or foreign sounds.

When you first glance at the Sinhala script (used for the Sinhalese language) and the Tamil script (used for Tamil in Sri Lanka, India, and Singapore), they look like two separate artistic worlds. Sinhala appears curvy and circular (like many Brahmic scripts), while Tamil looks angular and linear.