U+0950, ॐ
DEVANAGARI OM

[U+094F]
Devanagari ◌॑
[U+0951]

🕉 U+1F549, 🕉
OM SYMBOL
🕈
[U+1F548]
Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs 🕊
[U+1F54A]

Translingual edit

Design edit

A ligature of the letters and , with the diacritic .

Symbol edit

  1. om or aum: the sacred syllable and mantra in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism

Hindi edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Sanskrit (oṃ)

Pronunciation edit

Interjection edit

(om) (Urdu spelling اوم)

  1. the sacred syllable and mantra in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism

Noun edit

(omm (Urdu spelling اوم)

  1. om; aum

Declension edit

Sanskrit edit

Presentations of 🕉︎
Text
style
Emoji
style
🕉︎ 🕉️
Note: Character's appearance
may be different on each system.
Text style is forced with ︎
and emoji style with ️

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Etymology disputed.

  • A. Parpola proposes borrowing from Dravidian, ultimately from Proto-Dravidian *ām (let it be so, it is so, yes), a contraction of *ākum, cognate with Tamil ஆம் (ām, yes).
  • M. Blumfield proposes derivation from Proto-Indo-European *au (introductory particle) via *ō >* ōṃ > ōm, cognate with Ancient Greek αὖ ().
  • The Upaniṣads propose multiple Sanskrit etymologies, including: from आम् (ām, yes); from एवम् (evam, that, thus, yes); and from आप् (āp, to attain) or अव् (av, to urge).

Pronunciation edit

Interjection edit

(óṃ)

  1. the sacred syllable and mantra in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism: om, aum

Descendants edit

  • Bengali: ওঁ (ō̃)
  • Burmese: ဥုံ
  • Chinese: (ǎn)
  • English: om
  • Hindi: (om)
  • Japanese: (on)
  • Malayalam: ഓം (ōṁ)
  • Kannada: ಓಂ (ōṃ)
  • Tamil:
  • Telugu: ఓం (ōṁ)
  • Thai: โอม (oom)
  • Tibetan: ཨོཾ (oṃ)
  • Sundanese: ᮃᮅᮙ᮪ (aum)

References edit