sauna
concept
concept
tour
tour
two_italics
two italics
ligatures
ligatures
figures
figures
dingbats
dingbats
font_formats
font formats
webfonts
webfonts
character_set
character set
making_of
making of
type_specimen
type specimen
PDF
PDF
supplements
supplements
Tahitian
68.000 speakers
10 language specific characters
ISO 639 code: tah
Tahitian is a Polynesian language spoken in French Polynesia by about 68,000 people. Most speakers of the language live in the Society Islands (Îles de la Société) and some islands in the Tuamotus including the Mihiroa group. It is also spoken in New Caledonia, New Zealand and Vanuatu, and is closely related to Rarotongan and Hawai'ian.
Until the early 19th century Tahitian was a purely oral language. A Tahitian spelling system using the Latin alphabet was developed by John Davis, a Welsh historian and linguist, and proposed on 8th March 1805. Davis produduced the first printed book in Tahitian, an ABC called Te Aebi no Tahiti, in 1810. Most of the written material published since has been of a religious or educational nature.
source
wikipedia.org, omniglot.com & ethnologue.com
Are you a hyperpolyglot? Tahitian is supported by our fonts, but unfortunately we don't have our sample text translated yet into Tahitian. If you can help us out by making a translation of these few lines of text, you rock!

Don’t be a cuckoo if you’re a nightingale.
Don’t be a nightingale or a flycatcher, if you’re a dog.
But anyone can make sound.
We are Underware.