Bengali–Assamese script


The Bengali–Assamese script, also known as Eastern Nagari script, is the fifth most widely used writing system in the world. It is the basis of the Bengali and Assamese alphabets, as well as the alphabets of Bishnupriya Manipuri, Kokborok, Meitei, Chakma, Santali, Kamtapuri etc. Other languages, such as Angika, Bodo, Karbi, Maithili and Mising were once written in this script. Modern Sylheti is often written using this script as well, as is Sanskrit in areas where the script predominates. The Tirhuta script of Maithili is very closely related, though it behaves slightly differently.

Description

The Bengali—Asamese script was originally not associated with any particular regional language, but was prevalent as the main script in the eastern regions of Medieval India. The script was also used to write Sanskrit. Epics of Hindu scripture, including the Mahabharata or Ramayana, were written in older versions of the Eastern Nagari script in this region. After the medieval period, the use of Sanskrit as the sole written language gave way to Magadhi Apabhramsa eventually evolved into Bengali, Assamese and other related languages. Sankardev used the script in the 15th and 16th centuries to compose his oeuvre in Assamese and Brajavali the language of the Bhakti poets; and before him, Madhava Kandali used it to write the Assamese Ramayana in the 14th century. It was also used by the later Ahom kings to write the Buranjis, the Ahom chronicles, in the Assamese language. There is a rich legacy of East sub-continental literature written in this script, which is still occasionally used to write Sanskrit today.

Script

In this and other articles on Wikipedia dealing with the Assamese and Bengali languages, a Romanization scheme used by linguists specializing in Assamese and Bengali phonology is included along with IPA transcription.

Alphabets

There are three major modern alphabets in this script: Tirhuta, Bengali, and Assamese. Modern Assamese is very similar to modern Bengali though Tirhuta is more different from both Assamese and Bengali. Assamese has at least one extra letter, ৱ, that Bengali does not, and the letter ক্ষ is not a conjunct as in Bengali, but a letter by itself. The alphabetical orders of the two alphabets also differ. Languages like Meitei and Bishnupriya Manipuri use a hybrid of the two alphabets, with the Bengali র and the Assamese ৱ. Tirhuta carries forward some forms used in medieval Assamese.
Some other languages use a vowel অৗ to denote // which is not found in either Bengali or Assamese; and though the vowel diacritic, is found in Tirhuta the vowel letter itself is absent.

Vowels

The script presently has a total of 11 vowel letters, used to represent the seven vowel sounds of Bengali and eight vowel sounds of Assamese, along with a number of vowel diphthongs. All of these vowel letters are used in both Assamese and Bengali. Some of the vowel letters have different sounds depending on the word, and a number of vowel distinctions preserved in the writing system are not pronounced as such in modern spoken Bengali or Assamese. For example, the script has two symbols for the vowel sound and two symbols for the vowel sound . This redundancy stems from the time when this script was used to write Sanskrit, a language that had a short and a long, and a short and a long. These letters are preserved in the script with their traditional names of "short i" and "long i", etc., despite the fact that they are no longer pronounced differently in ordinary speech.
Two additional modified Vowels, অ' and অ্যা, are not considered letters of the Eastern Nagari script, but are often used in Assamese and Bengali to represent certain vowels when the intended pronunciation would otherwise be ambiguous.
VowelsVowel Diacritic
symbol
AssameseBengaliBishnupriya
Manipuri
Meitei
Manipuri
SylhetiHajongRabhaRajbongsi
ôô/oôô/aooôô
অʼʼo
aaaa꞉aaaa
অ্যা/এ্যা ্যাæ
অৗââ
িiiiiiiii
ইʼ িʼî
iiiī
uuuuuuuu
উʼুʼâ
uuuū
ririririri
riirii
lili
liilii
êe/êeeêeeê
এʼ েʼe
ôiôiôieioioiôi
ûouo/ôôoo
ôuôuôuououôuôu

Vowel signs can be used in conjunction with consonants to modify the pronunciation of the consonant. When no vowel Diacritic symbol is written, then the vowel "অ" is the default inherited vowel for the consonant. To specifically denote the absence of a vowel, a hôsôntô may be written underneath the consonant.

Consonants

The names of the consonant letters in Eastern Nagari are typically just the consonant's main pronunciation plus the inherent vowel "অ" ô. Since the inherent vowel is assumed and not written, most letters' names look identical to the letter itself. Some letters that have lost their distinctive pronunciation in Modern Assamese and Bengali are called by a more elaborate name. For example, since the consonant phoneme /n/ can be written ন, ণ, or ঞ, these letters are not simply called ; instead, they are called "dental nô", "cerebral nô" and niô. Similarly, the phoneme in Bengali and in Assamese can be written as "palatal shô/xhô" শ, "cerebral shô/xhô" ষ, or "dental sô/xô" স, depending on the word.
ConsonantAssameseBengaliBishnupriya
Manipuri
Meitei
Manipuri
SylhetiHajongMaithili
xokoka
khôkhôkhôkhôxokhokha
gogoga
ghôghôghôghôgoghogha
ungôngôngôngôngonga
sococa
chôchôsoso-
?-cha
zojoja
zhôjhôjhôjhôzojho-
?jha
niônia
ţôţôto
?ţa
thôţhôţhôtoţha
đôđôdo-da
ড়ŗôŗôŗo
dhôđhôđhôdo-da
ঢ়rhôŗhôŗhôro
no--
ṭotota
thôthôthôthôṭothotha
ḍododa
dhôdhôdhôdhôḍodhodha
nonona
fopopa
phôfofo-
?pha
bobora
bhôbhôbhôbhôbobhobha
momoma
zo-ya
য়yo
-rova
rorora
lo
?la
owo
şôşô-sha
şşôşşô-ssha
şôşo-sa
hoho-
?-ha

Digits

Western Arabic numerals0123456789
Bengali numerals
Assamese namesxuinnoekduitinisaripãssoyxatathno
Assamese namesশূন্যএকদুইতিনিচাৰিপাঁচছয়সাতআঠ
Bengali namesshunnôækduitincharpãchchhôyshatnôy
Bengali namesশূন্যএকদুইতিনচারপাঁচছয়সাতআটনয়
Meitei namesshunyaamaaniahummarimangataruktaretnipa꞉nma꞉pan
Meitei namesশুন‍্যঅমাঅনিঅহুমমরিমঙাতরূকতরেৎনীপানমাপন
Sylheti namesshuinnoexduitinsairfassoeshat/hatnoe
Sylheti namesশুইন্য়এখদুইতিনছাইরফাছছয়সাত/হাতআটনয়
Maithili namesshūnyaekdutīncharipãchchhausataţhnau
Maithili namesশূন্যএকদুতীনচাৰিপাঁচছৌসাতআঠনৌ

Unicodes

There are two Unicode blocks for Bengali–Assamese script, called Bengali and Tirhuta. The Bengali block is U+0980–U+09FF:
The Tirhuta block is
U+11480–U+114DF: