Nakhi Geba
Central Asian

script: Nkgb
family: Central Asian
type: syllabary
whitespace: unspecified
open_type_tag: none
complex_positioning: unknown
unicode: true
status: Historical
baseline: bottom
ligatures: unspecified
direction: ltr
Nakhi Geba (also called Na-Khi ²Ggŏ-¹baw or Naxi Geba) is one of three scripts used for writing the Naxi language, a Tibeto-Burman language spoken by approximately 310,000 people in the Chinese provinces of Yunnan and Sichuan, and in Tibet. Naxi has also been written in the Latin and, more famously, the Dongba scripts.
Nakhi Geba is thought to have been developed around 1200-1250 AD but was never widely used; its primary use was the transcription of religious mantras. There are few remaining texts in the script, and little is known about it. It was a syllabary, and the shapes of the letters appear to have been variously based on Chinese and Dongba characters, with some original designs.