Shahmukhi alphabet

Not to be confused with Gurmukhī alphabet, the Punjabi script used in India and other countries.
Shahmukhi
Type
Abjad
Languages

Punjabi

Parent systems

U+0600 to U+06FF
U+0750 to U+077F
U+FB50 to U+FDFF

U+FE70 to U+FEFF

Shahmukhi (Punjabi: شاہ مکھی, Gurmukhi: ਸ਼ਾਹਮੁਖੀ, meaning literally "from the King's mouth") is a Perso-Arabic alphabet used by Muslims in Punjab to write the Punjabi language. It is generally written in Nastaʿlīq hand. Perso-Arabic is one of two scripts used for Punjabi, the other being Gurumukhi.

The Shahmukhi alphabet was first used by the Sufi poets of the Punjab; it became the conventional writing style for the Muslim populace of the Pakistani province of Punjab following the independence of Pakistan in 1947, while the largely Hindu and Sikh modern-day state of Punjab, India adopted the Gurmukhi script to record the Punjabi language.

It is used as the main alphabet in Indian Punjab and is also used as the main alphabet to write the Pothohari dialect in Indian Jammu and Kashmir.

Shahmukhi is written from right to left, while Gurmukhi is written from left to right. Below is the comparison of the two scripts.

Top left: International Phonetic Alphabet, dash, top right: Gurmukhi, bottom: Shahmukhi.

Features

Vowel Initial Medial Final
ā (ਆ) آ ـا
e, æ (ਏ ਐ) اَے ـَيـ ـَے
ū (ਊ) اُو ـُو
ī (ਈ) اِی ـِیـ ـِی
au, o (ਔ ਓ) اَو ـَو

Loanwords

In Punjabi, there are many Arabic and Persian loanwords. These words contain some sounds which were alien to South Asian languages before the influence of Arabic and Persian, and are therefore represented by introducing dots beneath specific Gurumukhi characters. Since the Gurmukhi alphabet is phonetic, any loanwords which contained pre-existing sounds were more easily transliterated without the need for characters modified with subscript dots.

Letter Gurmukhi
ذ ਜ਼
ص
ض ਜ਼
ط
ظ ਜ਼
غ ਗ਼
ح
ث
گ
چ
پ
ژ ਜ਼ (actually 'j' as pronounced in French)
خ ਖ਼
ز ਜ਼
ف ਫ਼
ق ਕ਼
ع variable

ع is often transliterated in many ways due to its changing sound in various Arabic and Persian words.

See also

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.