The Shan alphabet is characterised by the circular letter forms of the
Mon-Burmese script. It is an abugida, all letters having an inherent vowel /a/. Vowels are represented in the form of diacritics placed around the consonants. It is written left to right
Vowels The representation of the vowels depends partly on whether the syllable has a final consonant. They are typically arranged in the manner below to show the logical relationships between the medial and the final forms and between the individual vowels and the vowel clusters they help form.
Consonants The Shan alphabet is much less complex than those of related
Tai-Kadai languages like
Thai. Having been reformed recently, Shan lacks many of the historical spelling remnants in Thai and Burmese. Compared to the Thai alphabet, it lacks the notions of high-class, mid-class and low-class consonants, distinctions which help the Thai script to number 44 consonants. Shan has only 19 consonants. The number of consonants in a textbook may vary: there are 19 universally accepted Shan consonants () and five more which represent sounds not found in Shan, g, z, b, d and th . These five () are quite rare. The consonant ရ occurs only in loanwords, as the consonant has otherwise merged ႁ in Shan. In addition, most editors include a dummy consonant () used in words with a vowel
onset. A textbook may therefore present 18-24 consonants. Like other
Brahmi scripts, Shan consonants are typically arranged in rows based on
place of articulation with columns based on aspiration and voicing ():
Tones The tones are indicated by tone markers at the end of the syllable. Shan tonal markers are mostly unambiguous and phonetic. In the absence of any marker, the default is the rising tone. While the reformed script originally used only four diacritic tone markers, equivalent to the five tones spoken in the southern dialect, the Lashio-based Shan Literature and Culture Association now, for a number of words, promotes the use of the 'yak khuen' () to denote the sixth tone as pronounced in the north. == Numerals ==