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Pau Cin Hau script

The Pau Cin Hau scripts, known as Pau Cin Hau lai, or Zo tual lai in Zomi, are two scripts, a logographic script and an alphabetic script created by Pau Cin Hau, a Zomi religious leader from Chin State, Burma. The logographic script consists of 1,050 characters, which is a traditionally significant number based on the number of characters appearing in a religious text. The alphabetic script is a simplified script of 57 characters, which is divided into 21 consonants, 7 vowels, 9 final consonants, and 20 tone, length, and glottal marks. The original script was produced in 1902, but it is thought to have undergone at least two revisions, of which the first revision produced the logographic script.

History
Pau Cin Hau claimed to have a series of dreams in 1900 in which an elderly saintly man, later identified as the creator god , handed him a book with symbols and taught him certain shapes. From these symbols, Pau Cin Hau created the logographic script in 1902 and later the alphabet. After being incorporated into Unicode, it is increasingly used in mobile communication and on Facebook, causing religious leaders concern that it loses its sacred status. ==Unicode==
Unicode
The Pau Cin Hau alphabet was added to the Unicode Standard in June 2014 with the release of version 7.0. The Unicode block for the Pau Cin Hau alphabet is U+11AC0–U+11AFF: ==Fonts==
Fonts
Noto Sans Pau Cin Hau supports the Pau Cin Hau script. ==References==
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