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Gujarati script

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Excerpt from "My experiments with truth" - the autobiography of Mahatma Gandhi in its original Gujarati script.
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Excerpt from "My experiments with truth" - the autobiography of Mahatma Gandhi in its original Gujarati script.

The Gujarati script, which like all Nagari writing systems is strictly speaking an abugida rather than an alphabet, is used to write the Gujarati language and the Kutchi language. It resembles Devanagari script without the line. A few letters are different, such as e (when not preceded by a consonant), l, and j. Also its numerical digits are different from their Devanagari counterparts.

Gujarati, written using Gujarati script.
With a few additional characters, added for this purpose, Gujarati can also be used to write Sanskrit.

Gujarati Alphabets, special symbols and numbers

The Gujarati alphabet utilizes overall 94 distinct legitimate and recognised shapes, which mainly includes 34 vyanjana (ornamented sounds – consonants), 2 compound characters that are treated as consonants (not lexically though), and 14 svara (pure sounds – vowels).

The alphabet is ordered by logically grouping the vowels and the consonants based on their pronunciations. The vowels (svara) consists of three pure sounds – a, i, and u. In the alphabet, the vowels follow the following order:

The consonants (vyanjana), on the other hand, are grouped in eight categories; seven of which are named by considering the usage and position of the tongue during their pronunciation. These categories are (in order): velar, palatal, retroflex, dental, labial, sonorant and fricatives. Further, each group (with a couple of exceptions) has five consonants in which the group starts with the softer sounding consonants, then the aspirated forms appear, and the group ends with the nasal sounding consonant. The alphabetic arrangement thus made aids in easy recitation and is retained in the memory for longer duration.

Sentence construction

In accordance with all the other Indic scripts, Gujarati is also written from left to right, and is not case-sensitive. The smallest unit or syllable is called akshara. Akshara is formed by combining minimum of one svara (vowel) with none or one vyanjana (consonant). A combination of one or more akshara forms a shabda (word). One or more words when put together with appropriate grammatical considerations form a vaakya (sentence). However, unlike Sanskrit where a sentence may be written literally without any spaces in between, Gujarati words are separated by a blank space. A space indicates the end of a word, but is not used as a form of explicit punctuation. The Gujarati writing system can be categorized under abugida, where each consonant has an inherent vowel (a), which can be modified by the application of other vowels.

Resemblance with

Owing to their origin from Brahmi, both Devanagari (used for Indic languages like Sanskrit, Hindi, Marathi and alike) and Gujarati scripts share the same shape for majority of their alphabets. The apparent difference can be attributed to the missing horizontal top bar from the Gujarati letter-forms compared to Devanagari. That apart, a reader who is able to read Devanagari script, should be able to interpret Gujarati script fairly easily. Consider the following example where a Sanskrit sloka is written in both the scripts:
Devanagari –
Gujarati –

Alphabet table

Consonants Unicode
name
Trans IPA
Guj Dev
Velar group:
ka
kha
ga
gha
nga
Palatal group:
cha
chha
ja
jha
nya
Retroflex group:
tta
ttha
dda
ddha
nna
Dental group:
ta
tha
da
dha
na
Labial group:
pa
pha
ba
bha
ma
Sonorant group:
ya
ra
la
va
         
Fricatives group:
sha
ssa
sa
ha
lla
Compound characters:
ક્ષ क्ष    
જ્ઞ ज्ञ    

Note the gray boxes in the table above which indicate a distinct change in glyph shape between Gujarati and Devanagari scripts.

Vowels Vowel as
applied to
Unicode
name
IPA
Guj Dev
 (none) a
કા aa
કિ i
કી ii
કુ u
કૂ uu
કૃ vocalic r Sanskrit)
કૅ candra e  
કે e
કૈ ai
કૉ candra o  
કો o
કૌ au

Special symbols Unicode
name
Usage IPA
Guj Dev
ક્ क् virama To suppress the inherent vowel; Also called 'halant'
કઁ कँ candrabindu For nasalizes vowel
કં कं anusvara For nasalizes vowel
કઃ कः visarga To add voiceless breath after vowel
ક઼ क़ nukta To indicate sounds borrowed from Persian (e.g., k + nukta = q)  
કઽ कऽ avagraha To prolong the vowel sound

Numbers 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Gujarati
Devanagari


Note: For more details on Devanagari alphabets, refer the respective Devanagari page.


Alphabet and script related reference and resources

Gujarati in Unicode

The Unicode range for Gujarati script is from U+0A80 to U+0AFF. The ISCII Code-page identifier for Gujarati script is 57010.

The table below shows the glyphs that are implemented in Unicode standard 4.0.0. Gray boxes indicate the code-points that are undefined/unused.

x= 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+0A8x    

 


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