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Letter "Ṝ" in Indic scripts
Ṝ
Example glyphs
Bengali–AssameseṜ
Tibetan
ཨཷ
Malayalam
Sinhala
Ashoka BrahmiṜ
DevanagariṜ
Cognates
Hebrewר
GreekΡ
LatinR
CyrillicР
Properties
Phonemic representation/ɻ̩ː/
IAST transliterationṝ Ṝ
ISCII code point00 (0)
<?>
This article contains uncommonUnicode characters. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of the intended characters.
Indic letters
Consonants
KaCaṬaTaPaYaŚa
KhaChaṬhaThaPhaRaṢa
GaJaḌaDaBaLaSa
GhaJhaḌhaDhaBhaVaHa
ṄaÑaṆaNaMa
ḶaḺaṞa
Vowels
AIUEO
ĀĪŪAiAu
Other marks
Punctuation

is a vowel-like letter of Indic abugidas, often referred to as a "vocalic R̄". In modern Indic scripts, Ṝ is derived from the early "Ashoka" Brahmi letterng. As an ostensible Indic vowel, Ṝ comes in two normally distinct forms: 1) as an independent letter, and 2) as a vowel sign for modifying a base consonant. Bare consonants without a modifying vowel sign have the inherent "A" vowel.

Āryabhaṭa numeration

[edit]
Further information:Āryabhaṭa numeration

Aryabhata used Devanagari letters for numbers, very similar to theGreek numerals, even after the invention ofIndian numerals. The ॄ sign was used to modify a consonant's value×106, but the vowel letter ॠ did not have an inherent value by itself.[1]

Historic Ṝ

[edit]

There are three different general early historic scripts -Brahmi and its variants,Kharoṣṭhī, andTocharian, the so-calledslanting Brahmi. Ṝ was not found as an independent vowel in Brahmi, only as a vowel mark for modifying a base consonant. Like all Brahmic scripts, Tocharian ṜṜ has an accompanying vowel mark for modifying a base consonant. In Kharoṣṭhī, the only independent vowel letter is for the inherent A. All other independent vowels, including Ṝ are indicated with vowel marks added to the letter A.

Brahmi Ṝ

[edit]

The Brahmi letter Ṝ was a simple modification of theBrahmi Ṛ, and as such isprobably ultimately derived from the AramaicResh, and is thus related to the modern LatinR and GreekRho.[2] Several identifiable styles of writing the Ṝ vowel sign can be found, most associated with a specific set of inscriptions from an artifact or diverse records from an historic period.[3] As the earliest and most geometric style of Brahmi, the letters found on theEdicts of Ashoka and other records from around that time are normally the reference form for Brahmi letters, but given the lack of Ṝ vowel signs in early Brahmi, the reference image is normally back-formed to a geometric form of later styles, and the independent letter for Ṝ is derived from the short Ṛ.

Tocharian Rii

[edit]

The Tocharian letterṜ is derived from the shortBrahmi Ṛ. The Tocharian Ṝ was very infrequently used, and only appears in the corpus in combination with a few base consonants.

Tocharian consonants with Ṝ vowel marks
Kr̄Khr̄Gr̄Ghr̄Cr̄Chr̄Jr̄Jhr̄Nyr̄Ṭr̄Ṭhr̄Ḍr̄Ḍhr̄Ṇr̄
Tr̄Thr̄Dr̄Dhr̄Nr̄Pr̄Phr̄Br̄Bhr̄Mr̄Yr̄r̄rLr̄Vr̄
Śr̄Ṣr̄Sr̄Hr̄


Kharoṣṭhī Ṝ

[edit]

The Kharoṣṭhī letter Ṝ is indicated with the vowel markṚ plus the vowel length mark. As an independent vowel, Ṝ is indicated by adding the vowel marks to the independent vowel letterAA.

Devanagari Ṝ

[edit]
Ṝ vowel
Ṝ vowel sign
Devanagari independent Ṝ and Ṝ vowel sign.

() is a vowel of theDevanagariabugida. It ultimately arose from theBrahmi letterṜ. Letters that derive from it are theGujarati letter, and theModi letter 𑘇.

Devanagari Using Languages

[edit]

The Devanagari script is used to write theHindi language,Sanskrit and the majority ofIndo-Aryan languages.In most of these languages, ॠ is pronounced as[ṝ][dubiousdiscuss]. Like all Indic scripts, Devanagari vowels come in two forms: an independent vowel form for syllables that begin with a vowel sound, and a vowel sign attached to base consonant to override the inherent /ə/ vowel.

Bengali Ṝ

[edit]
Ṝ vowel
Ṝ vowel sign
Bengali independent Ṝ and Ṝ vowel sign.

() is a vowel of theBengaliabugida. It is derived from theSiddhaṃ letterṜ, and is marked by the lack of horizontal head line and less geometric shape than its Devanagari counterpart, ॠ.

Bengali Script Using Languages

[edit]

The Bengali script is used to write several languages of eastern India, notably theBengali language andAssamese. In most languages, ৠ is pronounced as[ṝ]. Like all Indic scripts, Bengali vowels come in two forms: an independent vowel form for syllables that begin with a vowel sound, and a vowel sign attached to base consonant to override the inherent /ɔ/ vowel.

Gujarati Ṝ

[edit]
Ṝ vowel
Ṝ vowel sign
Gujarati independent Ṝ and Ṝ vowel sign.

() is a vowel of theGujaratiabugida. It is derived from the Devanagari Ṝrr, and ultimately theBrahmi letterrr.

Gujarati-using Languages

[edit]

The Gujarati script is used to write theGujarati andKutchi languages. In both languages, ૠ is pronounced as[ṝ]. Like all Indic scripts, Gujarati vowels come in two forms: an independent vowel form for syllables that begin with a vowel sound, and a vowel sign attached to base consonant to override the inherent /ə/ vowel.

Telugu Ṝ

[edit]
Telugu independent vowel Ṝ
Telugu vowel sign Ṝ
Telugu independent vowel and vowel sign Ṝ.

() is a vowel of theTeluguabugida. It ultimately arose from theBrahmi letterṜ Ṝ. It is closely related to theKannada letter. Like in other Indic scripts, Telugu vowels have two forms: and independent letter for word and syllable-initial vowel sounds, and a vowel sign for changing the inherent "a" of Telugu consonant letters. Ṝ is a non-attaching vowel sign, and does not alter the underlying consonant or contextually shape itself in any way.

Telugu Ṝ vowel sign on క, ఖ, గ, ఘ & ఙ: Kṝ, Khṝ, Gṝ, Ghṝ and Ngṝ.

Malayalam Ṝ

[edit]
Malayalam independent vowel Ṝ
Malayalam vowel sign Ṝ
Malayalam independent vowel and vowel sign Ṝ.

() is a vowel of theMalayalamabugida. It ultimately arose from theBrahmi letterṜ, via theGrantha letterṜrr. Like in other Indic scripts, Malayalam vowels have two forms: an independent letter for word and syllable-initial vowel sounds, and a vowel sign for changing the inherent "a" of consonant letters. Vowel signs in Malayalam usually sit adjacent to its base consonant - below, to the left, right, or both left and right, but are always pronounced after the consonant sound. Some vowel signs, such as Ṝ, can also form a ligature with some consonants, although this is much more common in old-stylepaḻaya lipi texts than in the modernreformedpaḻaya lipi orthography.

Malayalam Ṝ vowel sign on ക, ഖ, ഗ, ഘ, & ങ: Kṝ, Khṝ, Gṝ, Ghṝ and Ngṝ inpaḻaya lipi.

Odia Ṝ

[edit]
Odia independent vowel Ṝ
Odia vowel sign Ṝ
Odia independent vowel and vowel sign Ṝ.

() is a vowel of theOdiaabugida. It ultimately arose from theBrahmi letterṜ, via theSiddhaṃ letterṜrr. Like in other Indic scripts, Odia vowels have two forms: an independent letter for word and syllable-initial vowel sounds, and a vowel sign for changing the inherent "a" of consonant letters. Vowel signs in Odia usually sit adjacent to its base consonant - below, to the left, right, or both left and right, but are always pronounced after the consonant sound. No base consonants are altered in form when adding a vowel sign, and there are no consonant+vowel ligatures in Odia.

Tirhuta Ṝ

[edit]
Tirhuta independent vowel Ṝ
Tirhuta vowel sign Ṝ
Tirhuta independent vowel and vowel sign Ṝ.

(𑒈) is a vowel of theTirhutaabugida. It ultimately arose from theBrahmi letterṜ, via theSiddhaṃ letterṜrr. Like in other Indic scripts, Tirhuta vowels have two forms: an independent letter for word and syllable-initial vowel sounds, and a vowel sign for changing the inherent "a" of consonant letters. Vowel signs in Tirhuta usually sit adjacent to its base consonant - below, to the left, right, or both left and right, but are always pronounced after the consonant sound. No consonants are altered in form when adding the vowel mark, although there are some consonant+vowel ligatures in Tirhuta.

Comparison of Ṝ

[edit]

The various Indic scripts are generally related to each other through adaptation and borrowing, and as such the glyphs for cognate letters, including Ṝ, are related as well.

Comparison of Ṝ in different scripts
Aramaic
Ṝ
Kharoṣṭhī
-
Ashoka Brahmi
Ṝ
Kushana Brahmi[a]
𑀌
Tocharian[b]
-
Gupta Brahmi
𑀌
Pallava
-
Kadamba
-
Bhaiksuki
𑰇
Siddhaṃ
Ṝ
Grantha
𑍠
Cham
-
Sinhala
Pyu /
Old Mon[c]
-
Tibetan
ཨཷ
Newa
𑐇
Ahom
-
Malayalam
Telugu
Burmese
Lepcha
-
Ranjana
Ṝ
Saurashtra
Dives Akuru
-
Kannada
Kayah Li
-
Limbu
-
Soyombo[d]
-
Khmer
-
Tamil
-
Chakma
-
Tai Tham
-
Meitei Mayek
-
Gaudi
-
Thai
-
Lao
-
Tai Le
-
Marchen
-
Tirhuta
𑒈
New Tai Lue
-
Tai Viet
-
Aksara Kawi
-
'Phags-pa
-
Odia
Sharada
𑆊
Rejang
-
Batak
-
Buginese
-
Zanabazar Square
-
Bengali-Assamese
Ṝ
Takri
-
Javanese
-
Balinese
-
Makasar
-
Hangul[e]
-
Northern Nagari
-
Dogri
𑠲
Laṇḍā
-
Sundanese
-
Baybayin
-
Modi
𑘇
Gujarati
Khojki
-
Khudabadi
-
Mahajani
-
Tagbanwa
-
Devanagari
Ṝ
Nandinagari
𑦧
Kaithi
-
Gurmukhi
-
Multani
-
Buhid
-
Canadian Syllabics[f]
-
Soyombo[g]
-
Sylheti Nagari
-
Gunjala Gondi
-
Masaram Gondi[h]
-
Hanuno'o
-
Notes
  1. ^The middle "Kushana" form of Brahmi is a later style that emerged as Brahmi scripts were beginning to proliferate. Gupta Brahmi was definitely a stylistic descendant from Kushana, but other Brahmi-derived scripts may have descended from earlier forms.
  2. ^Tocharian is probably derived from the middle period "Kushana" form of Brahmi, although artifacts from that time are not plentiful enough to establish a definite succession.
  3. ^Pyu and Old Mon are probably the precursors of the Burmese script, and may be derived from either the Pallava or Kadamba script
  4. ^May also be derived from Devangari (see bottom left of table)
  5. ^TheOrigin of Hangul from 'Phags-pa is one of limited influence, inspiring at most a few basic letter shapes. Hangul does not function as an Indic abugida.
  6. ^Although the basic letter forms of the Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics were derived from handwritten Devanagari letters, this abugida indicates vowel sounds by rotations of the letter form, rather than the use of vowel diacritics as is standard in Indic abugidas.
  7. ^May also be derived from Ranjana (see above)
  8. ^Masaram Gondi acts as an Indic abugida, but its letterforms were not derived from any single precursor script.


Character encodings of Ṝ

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Most Indic scripts are encoded in theUnicode Standard, and as such the letter Ṝ in those scripts can be represented in plain text with unique codepoint. Ṝ from several modern-use scripts can also be found in legacy encodings, such asISCII.

Character information
Preview
Unicode nameDEVANAGARI LETTER VOCALIC RRBENGALI LETTER VOCALIC RRTELUGU LETTER VOCALIC RRORIYA LETTER VOCALIC RRKANNADA LETTER VOCALIC RRMALAYALAM LETTER VOCALIC RRGUJARATI LETTER VOCALIC RR
Encodingsdecimalhexdechexdechexdechexdechexdechexdechex
Unicode2400U+09602528U+09E03168U+0C602912U+0B603296U+0CE03424U+0D602784U+0AE0
UTF-8224 165 160E0 A5 A0224 167 160E0 A7 A0224 177 160E0 B1 A0224 173 160E0 AD A0224 179 160E0 B3 A0224 181 160E0 B5 A0224 171 160E0 AB A0
Numeric character reference&#2400;&#x960;&#2528;&#x9E0;&#3168;&#xC60;&#2912;&#xB60;&#3296;&#xCE0;&#3424;&#xD60;&#2784;&#xAE0;
ISCII


Character information
Preview
Ashoka
Kushana
Gupta
𑍠
Unicode nameBRAHMI LETTER VOCALIC RRSIDDHAM LETTER VOCALIC RRGRANTHA LETTER VOCALIC RR
Encodingsdecimalhexdechexdechex
Unicode69644U+1100C71047U+1158770496U+11360
UTF-8240 145 128 140F0 91 80 8C240 145 150 135F0 91 96 87240 145 141 160F0 91 8D A0
UTF-1655300 56332D804 DC0C55301 56711D805 DD8755300 57184D804 DF60
Numeric character reference&#69644;&#x1100C;&#71047;&#x11587;&#70496;&#x11360;


Character information
Preview𑐇𑰇𑆊
Unicode nameNEWA LETTER VOCALIC RRBHAIKSUKI LETTER VOCALIC RRSHARADA LETTER VOCALIC RR
Encodingsdecimalhexdechexdechex
Unicode70663U+1140772711U+11C0770026U+1118A
UTF-8240 145 144 135F0 91 90 87240 145 176 135F0 91 B0 87240 145 134 138F0 91 86 8A
UTF-1655301 56327D805 DC0755303 56327D807 DC0755300 56714D804 DD8A
Numeric character reference&#70663;&#x11407;&#72711;&#x11C07;&#70026;&#x1118A;


Character information
Preview
Unicode nameMYANMAR LETTER VOCALIC RR
Encodingsdecimalhex
Unicode4179U+1053
UTF-8225 129 147E1 81 93
Numeric character reference&#4179;&#x1053;


Character information
Preview
Unicode nameKHMER INDEPENDENT VOWEL RYY
Encodingsdecimalhex
Unicode6060U+17AC
UTF-8225 158 172E1 9E AC
Numeric character reference&#6060;&#x17AC;


Character information
Preview
Unicode nameSINHALA LETTER IRUUYANNASAURASHTRA LETTER VOCALIC RR
Encodingsdecimalhexdechex
Unicode3470U+0D8E43145U+A889
UTF-8224 182 142E0 B6 8E234 162 137EA A2 89
Numeric character reference&#3470;&#xD8E;&#43145;&#xA889;


Character information
Preview𑘇𑦧
Unicode nameMODI LETTER VOCALIC RRNANDINAGARI LETTER VOCALIC RR
Encodingsdecimalhexdechex
Unicode71175U+1160772103U+119A7
UTF-8240 145 152 135F0 91 98 87240 145 166 167F0 91 A6 A7
UTF-1655301 56839D805 DE0755302 56743D806 DDA7
Numeric character reference&#71175;&#x11607;&#72103;&#x119A7;


Character information
Preview𑒈
Unicode nameTIRHUTA LETTER VOCALIC RR
Encodingsdecimalhex
Unicode70792U+11488
UTF-8240 145 146 136F0 91 92 88
UTF-1655301 56456D805 DC88
Numeric character reference&#70792;&#x11488;



Character information
Preview
Unicode nameBALINESE LETTER RA REPA TEDUNG
Encodingsdecimalhex
Unicode6924U+1B0C
UTF-8225 172 140E1 AC 8C
Numeric character reference&#6924;&#x1B0C;




References

[edit]
  1. ^Ifrah, Georges (2000).The Universal History of Numbers. From Prehistory to the Invention of the Computer. New York: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 447–450.ISBN 0-471-39340-1.
  2. ^Bühler, Georg (1898)."On the Origin of the Indian Brahmi Alphabet".archive.org. Karl J. Trübner. Retrieved10 June 2020.
  3. ^Evolutionary chart, Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal Vol 7, 1838[1]
Languages
Transliteration
Vowels and
syllabic consonants
aæ (का)ā
(कि)i (की)ī
(कु)u (कू)ū (कॖ) (कॗ)
(कृ) (कॄ)r̥̄
(कॢ) (कॣ)l̥̄
(के)ē (कॅ)ê (कॆ)e (कै)ai (कॕ) (कॎ)
(को)ō (कॉ)ô (कॊ)o (कौ)au (कऺ) (कऻ) (कॏ)
Consonants
Diacritics,
punctuation
and other symbols
अं (anusvāra) अः (visarga) अँ (candrabindu) अऀ (invertedcandrabindu) (avagraha)
क़ (nuqta) क् (virāma)3 (pluta) (jihvāmūlīya) (upadhmānīya)
अ॑` (svarita) अ॒ (anudātta) अ॓ (grave) अ॔ (acute)aum̐
(daṇḍa) (doubledaṇḍa) (lāghava cihna) (high spacing dot) INR (Indian rupee sign)
  • Devanagari (Unicode block)
  • Devanagari Extended
  • Devanagari Extended-A
  • Vedic Extensions
  • Devanagari Braille
  • Numerals
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