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Encyclopedia > Gurmukhi script

The Gurmukhi (ਗੁਰਮੁਖੀ) script, derived from the Landa alphabet and standardised by Guru Angad Dev in the 16th century, was designed to write the Punjabi language (ਪੰਜਾਬੀ). 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 41 consonants (vianjans), 9 vowel symbols (laga or matras), 2 symbols for nasal sounds, 1 symbol which duplicates the sound of any consonant, 3 subjoined forms of the consonants Ra, Ha and Va, and 1 post-base form of Ya.


The whole of the Guru Granth Sahib's 1430 pages are written in this script.

Contents

Consonants

The Gurmukhi (or Punjabi) alphabet contains thirty-five distinct letters. These are:

Ura Era Iri

The first three letters are unique because they form the basis for vowels. Apart from Era, these characters are never used on their own. See the section on vowels for further details.

Sussa
Sa
Haha
Ha
Kukka
Ka
Khukha
Kha
Gugga
Ga
Ghugga
Gha
Ungga
Nga
Chucha
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:

Shusha pair bindi
Sha
Khukha pair bindi
Khha
Gugga pair bindi
Ghha
Zuzza pair bindi
Za
Fuffa pair bindi
Fa
Lulla pair bindi
Lla

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 baring 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.


Dependent Vowels

ਿ
Mukta
a
Kanna
aa
Sihari
i
Bihari
ii
Lavan
ee
Dulavan
ai
Onkar
u
Dulankar
uu
Hora
oo
Kanaura
au

Dotted circles represent the barer 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.


Independent Vowels

a aa i ii ee ai
u uu oo au

Vowel Examples

ਆਲੂ – aaluu – potato ਦਿਲ – dil – heart

Letter Vowel sign Vowel with [k] Unicode name IPA
(ka) A ə
ਕਾ (kā) AA ɑ
ਿ ਕਿ (ki) I ɪ
ਕੀ (kī) II i
ਕੁ (ku) U ʊ
ਕੂ (kū) UU u
ਕੇ (ke) EE e
ਕੈ (kai) AI ɛ
ਕੋ (ko) O o
ਕੌ (kau) AU ɔ

Gurmukhi in Unicode

The Unicode range for Gurmukhi is U+0A00 ... U+0A7F.

    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:


  Results from FactBites:
 
History of Landa and Gurmukhi Script (1118 words)
The Gurmukhi ਗੁਰਮੁਖੀ script is derived from the Later Sharada script and was standardized by the second Sikh guru, Guru Angad Dev, in the 16th century for writing the Punjabi language.
According to Al-Biruni, Ardhanagari was a mixture of Nagari, used in Ujjain and Malwa, and Siddha Matrika or the Siddham script, a variant of the Sharada script used in Kashmir.
Later in the 20th century, the script was given the authority as the official script of the Eastern Punjabi language.
www.punjabidictionary.com/wordprocessor (199 words)
Although the Gurmukhi script has been adopted by Sikhs, and their religious scripture, the Sri Guru Granth Sahib has been written in the gurmukhi script.
The Gurmukhi script made its apperance earlier, and it was only later that the second Sikh Guru, Guru Angad Dev Ji condified and finalised the gurmukhi script and gave it the form that is popular today.
Punjabi is written primarily in Gurmukhi script in the India, and that Shahmukhi script in Pakistan.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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