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Devanagari is an Indic script used for many Indo-Aryan languages of North India and Nepal, including Hindi, Marathi and Nepali, which was the script used to write Classical Sanskrit. There are several somewhat similar methods of transliteration from Devanagari to the Roman script (a process sometimes called romanisation ), including the ...
For example, braille ⠅ (the consonant K) renders print क ka, and braille ⠹ (TH), print थ tha. To indicate that a consonant is not followed by a vowel (as when followed by another consonant, or at the end of a syllable), a halant (vowel-cancelling) prefix is used: ⠈ ⠅ (∅–K) is क् k, and ⠈ ⠹ (∅–TH) is थ् th.
The vowel अ (a) combines with the consonant क् (k) to form क (ka) with halant removed. But the diacritic series of क, ख, ग, घ (ka, kha, ga, gha, respectively) is without any added vowel sign, as the vowel अ (a) is inherent. The Jñānēśvarī is a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, dated to 1290 CE.
Ka (ક) is the first consonant of the Gujarati abugida. It is derived from the Devanagari Ka , and ultimately the Brahmi letter . ક (Ka) is similar in appearance to ફ ( Pha ), and care should be taken to avoid confusing the two when reading Gujarati script texts.
Hindi, English Monsoon Wedding: Mira Nair: 2002 English, Hindi Bollywood/Hollywood: Deepa Mehta: 2002 Kannada, Tamil H2O: Lokanath Rajaram 2003 Hindi, English: Jhankaar Beats: Sujoy Ghosh: 2004: Let's Enjoy: Siddharth Anand Kumar, Ankur Tewari: 2006 Telugu, English Indian Beauty: Shanti Kumar 2010 Malayalam, Tamil Anwar: Amal Neerad [57] 2011 ...
Ka (क k) (कवर्ण kavarṇa) is the first consonant of the Devanagari abugida. It ultimately arose from the Brahmi letter 𑀓 ( ), after having gone through the Gupta letter . Letters that derive from it are the Gujarati letter ક , and the Modi letter 𑘎.
Kalelkar wrote several books, including voluminous travelogues, in Gujarati, Marathi, and Hindi.The following is a partial list of Kalelkar's books: Quintessence of Gandhian Thought (English)
Bombay Hindi, also known as Bambaiya Hindi or Mumbaiya Hindi, [1] is the Hindustani dialect spoken in Mumbai, in the Konkan region of India. [1] [2] Its vocabulary is largely from Hindi–Urdu, [1] [2] additionally, it has the predominant substratum of Marathi-Konkani, which is the official language and is also widely spoken in the Konkan division of Maharashtra. [3]