Harvard-Kyoto

The Harvard-Kyoto Convention is a system for transliterating Sanskrit and other languages that use the Devanāgarī script into ASCII. It is predominantly used informally in e-mail, and for electronic texts.

Vowels

aAiIuUeaioau

Sonorants

RRRlRlRR

Anusvāra and visarga

अंअः
MH

Consonants

Velar
kkhgghG
Palatal
cchjjhJ
Retroflex
TThDDhN
Dental
tthddhn
Labial
pphbbhm
Semi-vowel
yrlv
Fricative
zSsh

Normal Sanskrit text encoded in the Harvard-Kyoto convention can be automatically translated to Devanāgarī Unicode, with two exceptions. Harvard-Kyoto cannot distinguish अइ (a followed immediately by i, in separate syllables) from ऐ (the diphthong ai); and it cannot distinguish ल l with chandrabindu followed by a normal l from a double ll with chandrabindu. However, both cases are uncommon.

See also

External links

References

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