Sorang Sompeng and Odia scripts for the Sora language

The Sorang Sompeng (Sora (Sorang Sompeng): 𑃐𑃦𑃝𑃗 𑃐𑃦𑃖𑃛𑃣𑃗) script is a modern (of early- to mid-20th century provenance) constructed writing system used to write Sora, a Munda language with approximately 300,000 speakers—the indigenous, Austroasiatic-speaking Sora people (alternatively named, and the word Sora alternatively spelled or romanized, Saura, Saora, Savara, and Sabara) of primarily coastal southern and eastern India. The script was created by the self-taught scholar and Sora activist Mangei Gomango in 1936 and is used primarily in religious contexts, akin to a liturgical language, in the rites of the Matar Banom (or Matharvanam) neo-animist religious movement of the Sora. To a far lesser, though still significant extent, Sorang Sompeng is learned, taught, read, and written for secular educational and literary purposes in Sora communities, primarily in the Indian states of Odisha and Andhra Pradesh.

The Sora language is also written in the Latin, Odia, and Telugu scripts.

Letters

Sorang Sompeng
kah𑃟IPA: /k/gah𑃕IPA: /ɡ/ngah𑃗IPA: /ŋ/cah𑃓IPA: /tʃ/jah𑃠IPA: /dʒ/nyah𑃡IPA: /ɲ/tah𑃑IPA: /t/dah𑃔IPA: /d/nah𑃙IPA: /n/pah𑃛IPA: /p/bah𑃒IPA: /b/mah𑃖IPA: /m/yah𑃜IPA: /j/
rah𑃝IPA: /r/lah𑃘IPA: /l/wah𑃚IPA: /w/sah𑃐IPA: /s/hah𑃞IPA: /h/ah𑃢IPA: /aː/ih𑃤IPA: /i/eeh𑃣IPA: /e/uh𑃥IPA: /u/oh𑃦IPA: /o/,/a/eh𑃧IPA: /ai/mae𑃨IPA: /mae/

Numerals

0𑃰1𑃱2𑃲3𑃳4𑃴5𑃵6𑃶7𑃷8𑃸9𑃹

Unicode

The Sorang Sompeng script was added to the Unicode Standard in January 2012, with the release of version 6.1.

Block

The Unicode block for Sorang Sompeng script, called Sora Sompeng, is U+110D0–U+110FF:

Sora Sompeng[1][2] (PDF)
0123456789ABCDEF
U+110Dx𑃐𑃑𑃒𑃓𑃔𑃕𑃖𑃗𑃘𑃙𑃚𑃛𑃜𑃝𑃞𑃟
U+110Ex𑃠𑃡𑃢𑃣𑃤𑃥𑃦𑃧𑃨
U+110Fx𑃰𑃱𑃲𑃳𑃴𑃵𑃶𑃷𑃸𑃹
Notes 1.^ As of Unicode version 17.0 2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points

Fonts

Microsoft Windows made a font called Nirmala UI, which supports Sora Sompeng.