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halants
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There are 7 letters in HALANTS ( A1H4L1N1S1T1 )
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Plural form of halant. |
Halants might refer to |
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Virama (Sanskrit: विराम, virāma ? ्) is a generic term for the diacritic in many Brahmic scripts, ்including Devanagari and Eastern Nagari script, used to suppress the inherent vowel that otherwise occurs with every consonant letter. The name is Sanskrit for "cessation, termination, end". As a Sanskrit word, it is used in place of several language-specific terms, such as halant (Hindi: हलन्त, halant ? ्); halant (Marathi: हलंत, halant ? ्), hoshonto (Bengali: হসন্ত, hôsôntô ? ্); (Assamese: হসন্ত or হছন্ত, hoxonto or hosonto ? ্); (Sylheti: ꠢꠡꠘ꠆ꠔꠧ, hośonto ꠆); halantu (Telugu: హలంతు, halantu ? ్); pulli (Tamil: புள்ளி, puḷḷi ? ்), chandrakkala (Malayalam: ചന്ദ്രക്കല, candrakkala ? ്); halanta (Kannada: ಹಲಂತ, halanta ? ್); halanta (Oriya: ହଳନ୍ତ, haḷanta ? ୍); halant (Punjabi: ਹਲਂਤ, halant ? ੍); a that (Burmese: အသတ်, a.sat IPA: [ʔa̰θaʔ], lit. "nonexistence" ်); and karan (การันต์), pinthu (พินทุ), lit. "point" or "dot" or thanthakhat (ทัณฑฆาต).In Devanagari and many other Indic scripts, a virama is used to cancel the inherent vowel of a consonant letter and represent a consonant without a vowel, a "dead" consonant. For example, in Devanagari,* क is a consonant letter, ka, * ् is a virama; therefore, * क् (ka + virama) represents a dead consonant k.If this k क् is further followed by another consonant letter, for example, ṣa ष, the result might look like क्ष, which represents kṣa as ka + (visible) virama + ṣa. In this case, two elements k क् and ṣa ष are simply placed one by one, side by side. Alternatively, kṣa can be also written as a ligature क्ष, which is actually the preferred form. * Generally, when a dead consonant letter C1 and another consonant letter C2 are conjoined, the result may be: * * A fully conjoined ligature of C1+C2; * Half-conjoined— * C1-conjoining: a modified form (half form) of C1 attached to the original form (full form) of C2 * C2-conjoining: a modified form of C2 attached to the full form of C1; or * Non-ligated: full forms of C1 and C2 with a visible virama.If the result is fully or half-conjoined, the (conceptual) virama which made C1 dead becomes invisible, logically existing only in a character encoding scheme such as ISCII or Unicode. If the result is not ligated, a virama is visible, attached to C1, actually written. * Basically, those differences are only glyph variants, and three forms are semantically identical. Although there may be a preferred form for a given consonant cluster in each language and some scripts do not have some kind of ligatures or half forms at all, it is generally acceptable to use a nonligature form instead of a ligature form even when the latter is preferred if the font does not have a glyph for the ligature. In some other cas... |