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Gurmukhi

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The Gurmukhi (ਗੁਰਮੁਖੀ) script, derived from the Lahnda alphabet and standardised by Guru Angad Dev in the 16th century, was designed to write the Punjabi (ਪੰਜਾਬੀ) language. The whole of the Guru Granth Sahib's 1430 pages are written in this script. The word Gurmukhi literally means "from the Mouth of the Guru".

Gurmukhi is a form of alphabet called an abugida, as each consonant has an inherent vowel (a), that can be changed using vowel signs.

Modern Gurmukhi has forty-one consonants (Vianjans), nine vowel symbols (Laga Matra), two symbols for nasal sounds (Bindi and Tippi) and one symbol which duplicates the sound of any consonant (Addak). In addition, four conjuncts are used: three subjoined forms of the consonants Rara, Haha and Vava, and one half-form of Yaiyya. Use of the conjunct forms of Vava and Yaiyya in increasingly scarce in modern contexts.

Gurmukhi has been adapted to write other languages, such as Sanskrit.

Contents

Consonants

The Gurmukhi alphabet contains thirty-five distinct letters. The first three letters are unique because they form the basis for vowels. Except for Aira, these characters are never used on their own. See the section on vowels for further details.

Name Pron. Name Pron. Name Pron. Name Pron. Name Pron.
Ura Aira Iri Sussa Sa Haha Ha
Kakka Ka Khukha Kha Gugga Ga Ghugga Gha Ungga Nga
Chuchaa Ca Chhuchha Cha Jujja Ja Jhujja Jha Yanza Nya
Tainka Tta Thutha Ttha Dudda Dda Dhudda Ddha Nahnha Nna
Tutta Ta Thutha Tha Duda Da Dhuda Dha Nunna Na
Puppa Pa Phupha Pha Bubba Ba Bhubba Bha Mumma Ma
Yaiyya Ya Rara Ra Lulla La Vava Va Rahrha Rra

In addition to these, there are six consonants created by placing a dot (bindi) at the foot (pair) of the consonant:

Name Pron.
Shusha paireen bindi Sha
Khukha paireen bindi Khha
Gugga paireen bindi Ghha
Zuzza paireen bindi Za
Fuffa paireen bindi Fa
Lulla paireen bindi Lla

Lulla paireen bindi was only recently added to the Gurmukhi alphabet. Some sources may not consider it a seperate letter.

Vowels

Gurmukhi follows similar concepts to other Brahmi scripts and as such, all consonants are followed by an inherent‘a’sound (unless at the end of a word when the ‘a’ is usually dropped). This inherent vowel sound can be changed by using dependent vowel signs which attach to a bearing consonant. In some cases, dependent vowel signs cannot be used – at the beginning of a word or syllable for instance – and so an independent vowel character is used instead.

Vowel Name IPA
Ind. Dep. with /k/ Letter Unicode
(none) Mukta A
ਕਾ Kanna AA [ɑ]
ਿ ਕਿ Sihari I [ɪ]
ਕੀ Bihari II [i]
ਕੁ Onkar U [ʊ]
ਕੂ Dulankar UU [u]
ਕੇ Lavan EE [e]
ਕੈ Dulavan AI [ɛ]
ਕੋ Hora O [o]
ਕੌ Kanuara AU [ɔ]

Dotted circles represent the bearer consonant. Vowels are always pronounced after the consonant they are attached to. Thus, Sihari is always written to the left, but pronounced after the character on the right.

Vowel Examples

Word Transcription Meaning
ਆਲੂ ālū potato
ਦਿਲ dil heart

Gurmukhi in Unicode

The Unicode range for Gurmukhi is U+0A00 ... U+0A7F. Using Unicode for Gurmukhi has only recently started to become widespread. Many sites still use proprietary fonts that convert Latin ASCII codes to Gurmukhi glyphs.

  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
A00            
A10    
A20  
A30             ਿ
A40                
A50                      
A60            
A70                      

External Links

Last updated: 08-22-2005 12:41:35
Last updated: 01-04-2007 01:18:57
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