Turbinella pyrum libation vessels, Mohenjodaro
IST
akṣarasamāmnāya Maitreem Bhajata: A Benediction This benediction was composed by His Holiness Chandrasekharendra Saraswati Swamy, the Sage of Kanchi, Known to all Indians as the "Paramacharya". It was rendered at the United Nations on Oct. 23, 1966 on the occasion of the UN day, by Bharat Ratna Smt. M.S.Subbulakshmi. Source:http://acharya.iitm.ac.in/maitreem.php IMPORTANT NOTES FOR THE FOLLOWING CHARTS: A dash indicates the letter does not exist in that particular language. North Indian script are to the left and South Indian scripts are in the middle, then the Arabic based scripts are on the right. An asterisk denotes that letter is a part of an extended character set of the alphabet. I have added Urdu and Sindhi to my main charts. These are Arabic based scripts and are written from right to left. For simplicity, the detached form is given since a letter can take up to four forms. Also, some letters like "z" can have multiple counterparts in Urdu and Sindhi, the most common letter is given. Velars: Miscellaneous Consonants - These letters are part of an extended character set in most of these alphabets and are used mostly for writing foreign words. The Tamil, Urdu, and Sindhi characters presented here are a part of their standard alphabets: *Can someone help me with Sindhi vowels?*
DEV - Devanagari
GUJ - Gujarati PUN - Punjabi (Gurmukhi) BEN - Bengali ASS - Assamese (identical to Bengali except for two characters as noted) ORI - Oriya TIB - Tibetan TEL - Telugu KAN - Kannada TAM - Tamil MAL - Malayalam SIN - Sinhala BUR - Burmese LAO - Lao THA - Thai KHM - Khmer JAV - Javanese BAL - Balinese TAG - Tagolog BAT - Batak BUG - Bugis (Buginese) Please email me with if you have fonts for languages which I do not have fonts. Also, email me with suggestions, corrections, and script additions. Thanks and enjoy! ConsonantsVelars:
Palatals: Retroflexes: Dentals: Labials: Glides (Semi-Vowels): Fricatives: ![]() Source: http://chinese-school.netfirms.com/Tibet/index.html akṣarasamāmnāya
சொல்லென்றது நாமகளாகிய தெய்வம் (தொல். சொல். 57, சேனா.)
http://www.ancient-buddhist-texts.net/index.htm Pàëi 352 [24.19] Taõhà vãtataõho anàdàno, For one who has abandoned craving and is free from grasping, who is skilled in etymology and terms, knowing the groupings and sequences of letters, this is the final birth. This one is called the Great Being, the Great Sage. Dhammapada (24.19)THE SOUND PATTERN of SANSKRIT IN ASIA An Unheralded Contribution by Indian Brahmans and Buddhist Monks by Frits Staal, University of California, Berkeley (2005) Using Digital Library India
The holdings of the Digital Library of India are fantastic, but some may find the DLI interface for viewing single images cumbersome and prefer working with a PDF file. A piece of freeware for Windows called "DLI Downloader" (http://sanskritdocuments.org/scannedbooks/dlidownloader/ ) claims to help with this, but I haven't been able to get it to work for me. Instead, I've been using a slightly more involved process to create PDF's from the individual images in DLI. It was suggested to me that some members of H-ASIA may find this useful, so I am sharing it here. Caveat: I'm using a PC and Adobe Acrobat (Full, not Reader) for this process. I can't speak to how or whether this will work on other platforms and with other PDF creation programs. To begin, you'll need to download all the individual images of the desired text from DLI. The freeware program called "LTVT Image Grabber" can do this after its default settings are changed as I describe below. The program can be downloaded in the file "Image_Grabber.zip" at http://ltvt.wikispaces.com/Utility+Programs . After downloading, extract Image Grabber from the ZIP file onto your computer and follow these steps: 1. In an internet browser (I use Firefox), locate the desired book in DLI and open the first page image by clicking on the "BookReader-1" link. This will open a new tab or window with a single page of the book. At the center of the bottom of the screen, to the right of the navigation arrows and page number indicator ("X of Y Pages") is a menu box with options like PTIFF, HTML, TXT, RTF and Meta. Ensure that PTIFF is selected. 2. Note down the final page number (the Y value in the "X of Y Pages" area) between the navigation arrows at the bottom center of the page. You'll need this for step 7. 3. Right-click somewhere on that browser page and select "Copy Image Location" (in Firefox, at least) to copy the image URL to the Windows clipboard. Note: this will not be the same URL that is listed in the web browser address field at the top of the window. 4. Start up the LTVT Image Grabber program and click on the tab "Numeric Sequence" near the top of the window in order to reach the settings that need to be altered. 5. In the field labeled "Number Prefix" replace whatever is there with the URL copied from the browser in Step 3. 6. Make the following changes in Image Grabber: 6a. In the field "Number suffix" type ".tif" (without quotation marks) 6b. In the field "Downloaded file name suffix" also type ".tif" (again, no quotes) 6c. Click on the Destination Folder button to choose where you want the downloaded images to be saved. Ultimately each individual downloaded image will end up in this folder, with the name "AS15-M-" followed by the downloaded page number. 7. Also in Image Grabber: 7a. In "Start #" enter the first page number (usually 1) 7b. In "End #" type in the number that you observed in step 2. 7c. In "# Digits" enter the number of digits in the final page number (usually 3, or occasionally 4 for very large files) 8. Return to the "Number Prefix" field where you pasted the DLI image address in step 5. 8a. Delete the ".tif" from the end of the address 8b. Delete the final two, three or four digits of the remaining address, corresponding to the number you typed in "# Digits" in step 7c. If this step isn't followed exactly, Image Grabber will give error messages when you try to download. 9. Click on the "Retrieve Files" button at the lower left of the Image Grabber window, and the downloading will begin. It may take some time for all of the images to download, depending on the size of the book and internet connection speed. 10. Once the downloading is finished, open Adobe Acrobat and go to File | Create PDF | From Multiple Files. This will call up a small window asking where to look for the files. Navigate to the destination folder you entered in step 6c, select all the images to be added to your new PDF document, and follow through with the rest of the self-explanatory Acrobat process to create a single PDF from all the individual image files. This may seem complicated at first glance, but after a couple tries the logic of it will be obvious. Best regards, Jon Jon Keune Ph.D. candidate (ABD) Religion Department Columbia University, New York City Visiting Research Associate Institute of Ethnology Academia Sinica Taipei, Taiwan | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

































