

If you want to start by learning one symbol at a time, choose 'First steps' from the categories bar at the top. This is an Aurebesh trainer where you translate words from Aurebesh to English by typing them in a text field. To start learning, go to the Menu and choose Read. Some Aurebesh fonts will flip a letter horizontally to indicate a capital letter, so if you see a horizontally flipped letter in a piece of Aurebesh text, it's intended as a capital letter. The Aurebesh does not have capital letters. Some, but not all, punctuation symbols that also have an Aurebesh counterpart, as you can see in the image above. However, they look almost identical to our Arabic numerals: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 This also works for ae, eo, kh, ng, oo, sh, th.Īurebesh doesn't just have different letters, but also different numbers. Try typing 'c h' and then 'ch' in the following text field: For example, an 'h' after a 'c' becomes a 'cherek'.

The font that is used on this website automatically creates ligatures. You can write in Aurebesh without using ligatures and it would still be correct. In fact, ligatures are, canonically, never mandatory. For example, c + h ( C + H ) becomes Cherek ( ch ).Īlthough in canon material, these ligatures are not always used and sometimes the two separate letters are used rather than the ligature. The only other difference is in Aurebesh, there are some digraphs (a combination of two letters representing one sound) that are written as one letter (called a ligature). As you can see, the Aurebesh has every letter we do, but with a different name and symbol.
