What is the meaning of ت?

Arabic letter tāʔ

The third letter of the Arabic alphabet. Its name is تَاء (tāʔ) and it has the sound of English t. It is preceded by ب (b) and followed by ث ().

The twenty-second letter in traditional abjad order, which is used in place of numerals for list numbering (abjad numerals). It is preceded by ش (š) and followed by ث ().

Short for تِلِفون (tilifōn, telephone (number)). Used before phone numbers.

An emoticon representing a face with a large smile, more commonly used on languages that use the Perso-Arabic script like Arabic, Farsi, and Urdu.

Form of ة .

Dialectal form of ة (-at)

particle denoting an oath, used only in تَٱللّٰهِ (tal-lāhi)

Abbreviation of تُوُفِّيَ (tuwuffiya, died).

The fourth letter of the Azeri in Arabic script.

The fourth letter of the Balti alphabet, written in the Perso-Arabic script

The sixth letter of the Burushaski alphabet, written in the Perso-Arabic script

The fifth letter of the Kurdish abjad.

The fourth letter of the Khowar abjad.

you (second-person singular pronoun)

you (second-person singular object pronoun)

Alternative form of حتّى (ḥatta)

you

your

The fourth letter of the Xiao'erjing abjad.

The eighteenth letter of the Hausa abjad.

The fifth letter of the traditional alphabet chart of Kashmiri.

The fourth letter of the Kazakh in Arabic Script. It represents the Cyrillic letter Т.

The third letter of the Malay alphabet, written in the Arabic script.

The fourth letter of the Pashto alphabet.

The fourth letter of the Perso-Arabic alphabet. It is preceded by پ and followed by ث. Its name is ته or تِ.

The fourth letter of the Punjabi (Shahmukhi) abjad. It is preceded by پ and followed by ٹ

Forming abstract nouns denoting a state, condition, or quality.

The fifth letter of the Sindhi abjad.

The fourth letter of the Urdu abjad.

Forming abstract nouns denoting a state, condition, or quality.

-ed (used to form past adjectives)

The fifth letter of the Uyghur alphabet.

The twenty-second letter of the Yoruba alphabet in the ajami script, equivalent to Latin script t.

Source: wiktionary.org