ISO_15924:Telu

Telugu script

Telugu script

Writing system from the Brahmic family of scripts


Telugu script (Telugu: తెలుగు లిపి, romanized: Telugu lipi), an abugida from the Brahmic family of scripts, is used to write the Telugu language, a Dravidian language spoken in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana as well as several other neighbouring states. It is one of the official scripts of the Indian Republic. The Telugu script is also widely used for writing Sanskrit texts and to some extent the Gondi language. It gained prominence during the Eastern Chalukyas also known as Vengi Chalukya era. It shares extensive similarities with the Kannada script, as both of them evolved from the Bhattiprolu and Kadamba scripts of the Brahmi family. In 2008, the Telugu language was given the status of a Classical Language of India, in recognition of its rich history and heritage.[6]

Quick Facts Telugu script తెలుగు లిపి, Script type ...

History

The Brahmi script used by Mauryan kings eventually reached the Krishna River delta and would give rise to the Bhattiprolu script found on an urn purported to contain Lord Buddha's relics.[7][8] Buddhism spread to East Asia from the nearby ports of Ghantasala and Masulipatnam (ancient Maisolos of Ptolemy and Masalia of Periplus).[9]Kadamba script developed by the Kadamba dynasty was derived from the Brahmi script and later evolved into the Telugu-Kannada script after the 7th century.[1][2][3] The Telugu and Kannada scripts then separated by around 1300 CE.[1][10][11] The Muslim historian and scholar Al-Biruni referred to both the Telugu language as well as its script as "Andhri".[12]

Vowels

Telugu uses sixteen vowels, each of which has both an independent form and a diacritic form used with consonants to create syllables. The language makes a distinction between short and long vowels.

More information Independent, With క (k) ...
  1. Not in modern use.

The independent form is used when the vowel occurs at the beginning of a word or syllable, or is a complete syllable in itself (example: a, u, o). The diacritic form is added to consonants (represented by the dotted circle) to form a consonant-vowel syllable (example: ka, kr̥, mo). does not have a diacritic form, because this vowel is already inherent in all of the consonants. The other diacritic vowels are added to consonants to change their pronunciation to that of the vowel.

Examples:

+ () → ఖీ/kʰa/ + /iː//kʰiː/
+ () → జు/dʒa/ + /u//dʒu/

Consonants

More information Character, Subscript ...

Subscript letters are used in consonant clusters and geminate consonants.

Marginal and archaic consonants

  • Additionally there are ౘ (ĉa) and ౙ (ẑa) for /t͡sa, d͡za/ which are rarely used, letters for <c, j> are commonly used instead.[13] They are referred in Telugu as dantya ca and dantya ja respectively. During the last century, ఱ (ṟa) known as banḍi ra in Telugu has been dropped. This letter is referred to as banḍi ra as opposed to ర (ra) which is referred to as repha.
More information Character, ISO ...

The letter for a voiced alveolar plosive is found in some inscriptions, it is thought to have been distinguished from the trill ఱ (ṟa) intervocalically rarely; its mostly found after a nasal as in మూన్ౚు (mūnḏu).[14]

Other diacritics

There are also several other diacritics used in the Telugu script. mutes the vowel of a consonant, so that only the consonant is pronounced. and nasalize the vowels or syllables to which they are attached. adds a voiceless breath after the vowel or syllable it is attached to.

More information Character, ISO ...

Examples:

క + ్ → క్   ka + k
క + ఁ → కఁka + kan̆
క + ం → కంka + kaṁ
క + ః → కఃka + kaḥ

Marginal and archaic diacritics and signs

◌఼: Telugu nuqta.

ఽ: Telugu avagraha.

ౝ: Nakaara pollu.

ఀ: The combining candrabindu nasal vowel diacritic of the Telugu script.

ఄ: Combining anusvara above.

౷: Siddham sign.

౿: Tuumu sign.

Places of articulation

There are five classifications of passive articulations:

Kaṇṭhya: Velar
Tālavya: Palatal
Mūrdhanya: Retroflex
Dantya: Dental
Ōshtya: Labial

Apart from that, other places are combinations of the above five:

Dantōsthya: Labio-dental (E.g.: v)
Kantatālavya: E.g.: Diphthong e
Kantōsthya: labial-velar (E.g.: Diphthong o)

There are three places of active articulation:

Jihvāmūlam: tongue root, for velar
Jihvāmadhyam: tongue body, for palatal
Jihvāgram: tip of tongue, for cerebral and dental
Adhōṣṭa: lower lip, for labial

The attempt of articulation of consonants (Uccāraṇa Prayatnam) is of two types,

Bāhya Prayatnam: External effort
Spṛṣṭa: Plosive
Īshat Spṛṣṭa: Approximant
Īshat Saṃvṛta: Fricative
Abhyantara Prayatnam: Internal effort
Alpaprānam: Unaspirated
Mahāprānam: Aspirated
Śvāsa: Unvoiced
Nādam: Voiced

Articulation of consonants

Articulation of consonants is the logical combination of components in the two prayatnams. The below table gives a view upon articulation of consonants.

More information Prayatna Niyamāvalī, Kanthya (jihvāmūlam) ...

The Telugu script has generally regular conjuncts, with trailing consonants taking a subjoined form, often losing the talakattu (the v-shaped headstroke). The following table shows all two-consonant conjuncts and one three-consonant conjunct, but individual conjuncts may differ between fonts. These are referred in Telugu as vattulu (వత్తులు).

More information క, ఖ ...

Consonants with vowel diacritics

The consonants with vowel diacritics are referred to in the Telugu language as guṇintālu (గుణింతాలు). The word Guṇita refers to 'multiplying oneself'. Therefore, each consonant sound can be multiplied with vowel sounds to produce vowel diacritics. The vowel diacritics along with their symbols and names are given below.[16]

More information Diacritic symbol, Vowel letter ...

The following table contains the consonants with vowel diacritics in the Telugu language.

More information అ, ఆ ...

Numerals

0123456789
More information 0⁄4, 1⁄4 ...

NOTE: , , and are used also for 164, 264, 364, 11024, etc. and , , and are also used for 1256, 2256, 3256, 14096, etc.[17]

Unicode

Telugu script was added to the Unicode Standard in October, 1991 with the release of version 1.0.

The Unicode block for Telugu is U+0C00U+0C7F:

Telugu[1][2]
Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
 0123456789ABCDEF
U+0C0x
U+0C1x
U+0C2x
U+0C3x ి
U+0C4x
U+0C5x
U+0C6x
U+0C7x ౿
Notes
1.^ As of Unicode version 15.1
2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points

In contrast to a syllabic script such as katakana, where one Unicode code point represents the glyph for one syllable, Telugu combines multiple code points to generate the glyph for one syllable, using complex font rendering rules.[18][19]

iOS character crash bug

On February 12, 2018, a bug in the iOS operating system was reported that caused iOS devices to crash if a particular Telugu character was displayed.[20][21] The character is a combination of the characters "జ", "్", "ఞ", "ా" and The Zero-Width Non-Joiner character which looks combined like this "జ్ఞా". Apple confirmed a fix for iOS 11.3 and macOS 10.13.4.[22]

See also


References

  1. Indian Epigraphy: A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in the Indo-Aryan Languages, by Richard Solomon, Oxford University Press, 1998, pp. 35, 40–41, ISBN 0-19-509984-2
  2. The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Writing Systems by Florian Coulmas, p. 228
  3. Handbook of Literacy in Akshara Orthography, R. Malatesha Joshi, Catherine McBride (2019), p. 29
  4. "chart". Archived from the original on 2020-07-24. Retrieved 2020-06-15.
  5. "Declaration of Telugu and Kannada as classical languages". Press Information Bureau. Ministry of Tourism and Culture, Government of India. Retrieved 31 October 2008.
  6. Murthy, K.N.; Rao, G.U. (April 2002). "Telugu Script" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-02-18.
  7. Diringer, David (1948). The Alphabet: A Key to the History of Mankind. p. 381.
  8. Al-biruni. English translation of 'Kitab-ul Hind'. New Delhi: National Book Trust.
  9. "Telugulo Chandoviseshaalu", Page 127 (In Telugu).
  10. Rangaswami Modalari (1901). "Pedda Balasiksha" (in Telugu). Poomagal Vilasam Mudraksharasala, Madras.
  11. Nāgārjuna Venna. "Telugu Measures and Arithmetic Marks" (PDF). JTC1/SC2/WG2 N3156. International Organization for Standardization. Retrieved July 29, 2012.
  12. "Developing OpenType Fonts for Telugu Script". Microsoft Learn. February 8, 2018. Archived from the original on May 6, 2022.
  13. Consortium, Unicode (2007). The Unicode Standard, Version 5.0: Chapter 9, South Asian Scripts-I (PDF). Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-0-321-48091-0. Archived (PDF) from the original on Nov 28, 2023. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  14. i.bulyga (February 12, 2018). "rdar://37458268: iOS and Mac OS System can't render symbol and has crashed". Open Radar. Retrieved 2018-03-12.
  15. Ritschel, Chelsea (2018-02-15). "iPhones, iPads and Macs crashed by Indian Telugu character sent via SMS, WhatsApp and other apps". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2018-02-16. Retrieved 2018-02-16.
  16. Clover, Juli (February 15, 2018). "Apple to Fix Telugu Character Bug Causing Devices to Crash in Minor iOS Update". MacRumors. Retrieved 2018-03-12.

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