You can use the PUA test page to see them Note: Supports ligatures and has a large number of alternate/additional Tifinagh letters encoded in the Private Use Area. OpenType Layout Tables: Arabic, Armenian, Bengali, Buhid, Cyrillic, Devanagari, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Han Ideographic, Hangul, Hangul Jamo, Hebrew, Khmer, Korean, Lao, Latin, Malayalam, Mongolian, Myanmar, N'Ko, Tamil, Telugu, Thai Support: Arabic script (Arabic, Baluchi, Kirghiz, Persian, Shahmukhi, Sindhi, Uighur, Urdu, Uzbek), Armenian, Bengali, Braille, Canadian Syllabics (all syllabaries, all characters), Cherokee, Chinese (Bopomofo only, including Extended), Cirth, Coptic, Cyrillic (all or most of range), Devanagari, Ethiopic (including supplement and extended blocks), Ewellic, Georgian (Mkhedruli and Asomtavruli), Greek (including polytonic and Coptic characters), Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Hebrew, IPA, Japanese (Hiragana, Katakana, Kanji/Han Ideographs including Extension A), Klingon, Korean (Hangul only), Lao, Latin, Limbu, Mongolian, N'Ko, Ogham, Phaistos, Runic, Syriac, Tamil, Telugu, Tengwar, Thaana, Thai, Tifinagh, Vietnamese, Yi Stats: Version 1.16 has 61,864 glyphs and 239 kerning pairs
Source: Download this shareware font ($5) from James Kass's webpage. Note: This font does not support Tifinagh ligatures. See the notes following the samples for more information about using ligatures. Letter shapes vary depending on geographic location and language.
See the notes following the samples for more information.
Today the script is usually written left-to-right, but in some places it's written from right-to-left instead. A version of the script has been taught in primary schools in Morocco since 2003. WAZU JAPAN's Gallery of Unicode Fonts Tifinaghīerber languages in North Africa (such as Tarifit, Tamazight, and Tachelhit) are sometimes written with Tifinagh script.