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Sindhi (/ ˈ s ɪ n d i / SIN-dee; [3] Sindhi: سِنڌِي (Perso-Arabic) or सिन्धी , pronounced) [a] is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by about 30 million people in the Pakistani province of Sindh, where it has official status.
Sindhi is a language broadly spoken by the people of the historical Sindh region in the Indian subcontinent. Modern Sindhi is written in an extended Perso-Arabic script in Sindh province of Pakistan [1] and (formally) in extended-Devanagari by Sindhis in partitioned India. [2]
There is a difference between transliteration and Romanisation. The present modified persio-arabic script of Sindhi language is highly context sensitive. Many of the letters of Sindhi alphabet share a common base form diacritical marks and diacritical points place either above or below (Zer, Zabar and peshu).
جهہ is the 13th letter of the Sindhi alphabet. It is represented by the two Unicode codepoints U+062C and U+0647. In the Indus Roman Sindhi romanization, it is represented as "JH".
گهہ (ghey), is the 43rd letter of the modified Perso-Arabic Sindhi alphabet. It is a combination of multiple letters and is used in Sindhi to represent the breathy affricate velar . [1] It is represented in the Sindhi Devanagari script by 'घ'. [2] For example, it is used in گهاگھہ meaning 'of old age'. [3]
The Khudabadi script of Sindhi language did not make further progress. Traders continued to maintain their records in this script till the independence of Pakistan in 1947. The present script predominantly used in Sindh as well as in many states in India and else, where migrants Hindu Sindhi have settled, is Arabic in Naskh styles having 52 ...
Ṭhē is an additional letter of the Arabic script.It has the basic shape of tāʼ (ت ), but with vertical dots, rather than horizontal.It is not used in the Arabic alphabet itself, but is used to represent an aspirated [] in Sindhi, a language mainly spoken in Pakistan.
Originally developed for Sindhi, it had also been used for Punjabi, Saraiki, and Gujarati as it spread, as well as for Arabic and Persian. Shifts in correspondences of letters most commonly included implosive letters for the tenuis consonants, and tenuis letters for aspirated stops.