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Khudabadi (देवदेन/ Devden), also known as Khudawadi, Hathvanki or Warangi, is a script used to write the Sindhi language, sometimes used by some Sindhi Hindus even in the present-day. The script originates from Khudabad , a city in Sindh , and is named after it.
For literary and religious purposes, a Perso-Arabic script developed by Abul-Hasan as-Sindi and Gurmukhi (a subset of Laṇḍā) were used. Another two scripts, Khudabadi and Shikarpuri, were reforms of the Landa script. [62] [63] During British rule in the late 19th century, the Perso-Arabic script was decreed standard over Devanagari. [64]
Laṇḍā is a script that evolved from the Sharada script during the 10th century. It was widely used in the northern and northwestern Indian subcontinent , in the Indus River plain, and adjoining areas, comprising Punjab , Sindh , Kashmir , and some parts of Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa .
Khudabadi script. Khudabadi (𑊻𑋩𑋣𑋏𑋠𑋔𑋠𑋏𑋢) is a script generally used by some Sindhis to write the Sindhi language. It is also known as Hathvanki (or Warangi) script. Khudabadi is one of the four scripts used for writing the Sindhi language, the others being Perso-Arabic, Khojki and Devanagari script.
Khudawadi is a Unicode block containing characters of the Khudabadi script used by some Sindhis in India for writing the Sindhi language. [3] Block. Khudawadi
Dodo Chanesar In Khudabadi script Dodo Chanesar ( Sindhi : دودو چنيسر ) is a Sindhi ballad, set during the Soomro dynasty . The ballad is semi-historical in nature and a very importance source of information on medieval Sindh .
In parts of Pakistan, the modified Perso-Arabic script is used instead. [9] In earlier times it was written in the Khudabadi and Khojki scripts, the latter of which is now extinct. Additionally, there may have been a Kutchi script, samples of which may be in the Kutch Museum [citation needed]. Below is a table of how different Kutchi words can ...
Khojkī, Khojakī, or Khwājā Sindhī (Sindhi: خوجڪي), is a script used formerly and almost exclusively by the Khoja community of parts of the Indian subcontinent, including Sindh, Gujarat, and Punjab. However, this script also had a further reach and was used by members of Ismaili communities from Burma to East and South Africa. [1]