Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

New Font Needed for Nepali variation of Devanagari with Altered Shape for झ and related conjuncts #59

Open
srijon2024 opened this issue Jul 19, 2024 · 3 comments

Comments

@srijon2024
Copy link

A Font would be required to replace standard Hindi झ with standard Nepali झ (different shape). Modern Nepali Preeti-based Fonts do help but the Dotted consonants used in Hindi like क़, ख़, ग़, ज़, झ़, ड़, ढ़, फ़ don't exist in them.

We need a Tiro Devanagari Nepali font with everything being same as Tiro Devanagari Hindi but replacement of shape of झ with Nepali style.

This font would be specifically used for Hindi, Nepali, Bhojpuri, Maithili, Awadhi, Rajbongshi/Kamtapuri, Kumaoni, Garhwali and Doteli. It will serve users in India, Nepal and Bangladesh.

Tiro Devanagari Nepali.pdf

@tiroj
Copy link
Contributor

tiroj commented Jul 19, 2024

Are you aware of any additional conjunct forms that would be useful for Nepali, beyond the झ conjuncts shown in the PDF? I do not have good conjunct analysis data for Nepali.

Am I correct in remembering that Nepali does not use the anusvara dot for nasalisation, but alwayys the candrabindu form?

@srijon2024
Copy link
Author

Are you aware of any additional conjunct forms that would be useful for Nepali, beyond the झ conjuncts shown in the PDF? I do not have good conjunct analysis data for Nepali.

Am I correct in remembering that Nepali does not use the anusvara dot for nasalisation, but alwayys the candrabindu form?

No, rest all conjunct consonants are same. Only झ is different.

In a Nepali font you should keep the traditional forms of क्त and क्र instead of the simplistic क्‍त and क्र. Nepali additionally uses र् + ZWJ + य = र्‍य.

In general Nepali doesn't use dotted consonants which Hindi has, but as a unicode font they must be retained as they are used in some languages of Nepali territories bordering India.

image

Newari and occasionally Nepali use another form of झ which is seen in some Brands (Sajha Publication, Sajha Travels).

image
image
image

@srijon2024
Copy link
Author

Am I correct in remembering that Nepali does not use the anusvara dot for nasalisation, but alwayys the candrabindu form?

Yes, Nepali uses Chandrabindu everywhere. The positioning of Chandrabindu with clear visibility has remained a big issue with Unicode fonts for Devanagari.

But Bindu (Anunasika) is retained for Sanskrit words.

Nepali uses a lot of conjuncts, more often than Hindi, but the pattern in both remains almost same. The differences have been shown in the previous reply.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

2 participants