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Telugu-Kannada alphabet
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Telugu-Kannada alphabet

Telugu-Kannada script
Kannada-Telugu script
Copper plate inscriptions in Kannada–Telugu script
Script type
Period
7th century –14th century[1][2]
DirectionLeft-to-right Edit this on Wikidata
LanguagesKannada
Telugu
Tulu
Konkani
Sanskrit
Related scripts
Parent systems
Child systems
Kannada script, Telugu script
Sister systems
Pyu
 This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For the distinction between [ ], / / and ⟨ ⟩, see IPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.

The Telugu–Kannada script (or Kannada–Telugu script) was a writing system used in Southern India. Despite some significant differences, the scripts used for the Telugu and Kannada languages remain quite similar and highly mutually intelligible. Satavahanas and Chalukyas influenced the similarities between Telugu and Kannada scripts.[3]

History

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The Dravidian family comprises about 73 languages including Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, and Malayalam. Satavahanas introduced the Brahmi to present-day Telugu and Kannada-speaking regions. [4][5][6] But according to Georg Bühler, it seems more likely that the Bhattiprolu script represents a provincial offshoot of early Brahmi in the south, rather than a separate line of development from a hypothetical Semitic prototype itself, as Bühler believed.[7]

During the 5th to 7th centuries the early Bādāmi Chālukyās and early Banavasi Kadambās used an early form of the Kadamba script in inscriptions.[8] When Chalukya empire extended towards Telugu speaking regions they established another branch in Vengi, namely the Eastern Chalukyas or the Chalukyas of Vengi who later introduced Kadamba script to Telugu language which developed into the Telugu-Kannada script which was used between the 7th and 11th centuries CE.[1]

Between 1100 CE and 1400 CE, the Telugu and Kannada scripts separated from the Telugu-Kannada script. Both the Telugu and Kannada scripts were standardised at the beginning of the nineteenth century.[9]

Comparison

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The following sections visualize the differences between modern-day Telugu (displayed on the left) and corresponding Kannada letters (displayed on the right).

Consonants

[edit]
ka
IPA: /ka/
kha
IPA: /kʰa/
ga
IPA: /ɡa/
gha
IPA: /ɡʱa/
ṅa
IPA: /ŋa/
ca
IPA: /tʃa/
cha
IPA: /tʃʰa/
ja
IPA: /dʒa/
jha
IPA: /dʒʱa/
ña
IPA: /ɲa/
ṭa
IPA: /ʈa/
ṭha
IPA: /ʈʰa/
ḍa
IPA: /ɖa/
ḍha
IPA: /ɖʱa/
ṇa
IPA: /ɳa/
ta
IPA: /t̪a/
tha
IPA: /t̪ʰa/
da
IPA: /d̪a/
dha
IPA: /d̪ʱa/
na
IPA: /n̪a/
pa
IPA: /pa/
pha
IPA: /pʰa/
ba
IPA: /ba/
bha
IPA: /bʱa/
ma
IPA: /ma/
ya
IPA: /ja/
ra
IPA: /ɾa/
la
IPA: /la/
va
IPA: /ʋa/
ḷa
IPA: /ɭa/
śa
IPA: /ʃa/
ṣa
IPA: /ʂa/
sa
IPA: /sa/
ha
IPA: /ha/
ṟa
IPA: /ra/

There is another legacy consonant ೞ/ఴ (ḻa) used to represent /ɻa/, but currently not in use.

Vowels

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Independent vowels

[edit]
a
IPA: /a/
ā
IPA: /aː/
i
IPA: /i/
ī
IPA: /iː/
u
IPA: /u/
ū
IPA: /uː/
IPA: /ɾu/
r̥̄
IPA: /ɾuː/
IPA: /lu/
l̥̄
IPA: /luː/
e
IPA: /e/
ē
IPA: /eː/
o
IPA: /o/
ō
IPA: /oː/
ai
IPA: /aj/
au
IPA: /aw/

Numerals

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0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

Unicode

[edit]
Telugu Kannada comparison

Although the alphabets for Telugu and Kannada languages could have been encoded under a single Unicode block with language-specific fonts to differentiate the styles, they were encoded separately by the governments due to socio-political reasons. Both the script variants were added to the Unicode Standard in October 1991 with the release of version 1.0.

See also

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References

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