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Avagraha
Avagraha
Example glyphs
Bengali–Assamese
Tibetan
Malayalam
Devanagari
Properties
Phonemic representation/-/
IAST transliteration' '
ISCII code pointEA E9 (60137)

Avagraha (, IPA: [ɐʋɐɡrɐɦɐ]) is a symbol used to indicate prodelision of an (a) in many Indian languages like Sanskrit as shown below. It is usually transliterated with an apostrophe in Roman script and, in case of Devanagari, as in the Sanskrit philosophical expression शिवोऽहम् Śivo'ham (Śivaḥ aham), which is a sandhi of (शिवः + अहम्) ‘I am Shiva’. The avagraha is also used for prolonging vowel sounds in some languages, for example Hindi माँऽऽऽ! for ‘Mā̃ā̃ā̃ā̃!’ when calling to one's mother. This symbol is more frequently used in the Eastern Hindi and Bihari languages especially Bhojpuri language.

In the case of Hindi, the character is also sometimes used as a symbol to denote long or heavy syllables, in metrical poetry. For example, the syllables in the word छंदः chandaḥ ‘metre’ (in nominative) can be denoted as "ऽऽ", meaning two long syllables. (Cf. other notations in entry "Systems of scansion".)

Glyph comparison

Comparison of avagraha in different scripts
Aramaic
-
Kharoṣṭhī
-
Ashoka Brahmi
-
Kushana Brahmi[a]
-
Tocharian[b]
-
Gupta Brahmi
-
Pallava
-
Kadamba
-
Bhaiksuki
𑱀
Siddhaṃ
-
Grantha
𑍝
Cham
-
Sinhala
-
Pyu /
Old Mon[c]
-
Tibetan
Newa
𑑇
Ahom
-
Malayalam
Telugu
Burmese
-
Lepcha
-
Ranjana
-
Saurashtra
-
Dives Akuru
-
Kannada
Kayah Li
-
Limbu
-
Soyombo[d]
𑪝
Khmer
Tamil
-
Chakma
-
Tai Tham
-
Meitei Mayek
-
Gaudi
-
Thai
-
Lao
-
Tai Le
-
Marchen
-
Tirhuta
𑓄
New Tai Lue
-
Tai Viet
-
Aksara Kawi
-
'Phags-pa
-
Odia
Sharada
-
Rejang
-
Batak
-
Buginese
-
Zanabazar Square
-
Bengali–Assamese
Takri
-
Javanese
-
Balinese
-
Makasar
-
Hangul[e]
-
Northern Nagari
-
Dogri
-
Laṇḍā
-
Sundanese
-
Baybayin
-
Modi
-
Gujarati
Khojki
-
Khudabadi
-
Mahajani
-
Tagbanwa
-
Devanagari
 / 
Nandinagari
-
Kaithi
-
Gurmukhi
-
Multani
-
Buhid
-
Canadian Syllabics[f]
-
Soyombo[g]
𑪝
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. The Origin 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.

Avagraha in Unicode

The avagraha symbol is encoded at several Unicode points, for various Brahmic scripts that use it.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Avagraha characters in Unicode
CharacterUnicode character numberFull Unicode name
U+093DDevanagari sign avagraha
U+A8F1Combining Devanagari sign avagraha
U+A8F7Devanagari sign candrabindu avagraha
U+09BDBengali sign avagraha
U+0ABDGujarati sign avagraha
U+0B3DOdia sign avagraha
U+0C3DTelugu sign avagraha
U+0CBDKannada sign avagraha
U+0D3DMalayalam sign avagraha
U+1939Limbu sign mukphreng
U+1BBASundanese sign avagraha
U+0F85Tibetan mark paluta
ៜ ‍‍U+17DCKhmer sign avakrahasanya
U+1885Mongolian letter Ali Gali baluda
U+1886Mongolian letter Ali Gali three baluda
𑍝U+1135DGrantha sign pluta
𑑇U+11447Newa sign avagraha
𑓄U+114C4Tirhuta sign avagraha
𑧡U+119E1Nandinagari sign avagraha
𑪝U+11A9DSoyombo mark pluta
𑱀U+11C40Bhaiksuki sign avagraha

References

  1. Devanagari (PDF), Unicode
  2. Bengali (PDF), Unicode
  3. Oriya(Odia) (PDF), Unicode
  4. Telugu (PDF), Unicode
  5. Malayalam (PDF), Unicode
  6. Tibetan (PDF), Unicode