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Download free Tamil language typing software The scripts used to write the Tamil language are Brahmi-based, not alphabetic. The script is called Tamil Brahmi or Grantha. It doesn't include vowels, marks long vowels with diacritics, and uses consonants to make clusters of three letters for words which have no corresponding single character. Tamil Brahmi is unrelated to the Indian scripts of Devanagari, Bengali, Gurmukhi, Gujarati, Oriya, Tamil, Telugu or Kannada. The Tamil language is an Eastern Dravidian language. Dravidian languages are used for all three scripts of South India - Malayalam (Mylanguage), Kannada (Mylanguage) and Tamil (Written). All these three script belong to the script family called Southern Brahmi. The earliest evidence for this family in South India comes from inscribed stones dated to 1500 BC like the 'Indus Valley seals'. The earliest attested epigraphic records of Tamil Brahmi date back to about 500 BC. Tamil Brahmi is an abugida and unlike other Brahmi-based scripts such as the Bengali, Assamese and Myanmar (Burmese), Tamil Brahmi includes letters for vowels. There is a limited set of consonants used in Tamil, while there are no vowels other than 'a', 'e' and 'o'. There are also three other consonant clusters existent, but the script cannot represent these combinations. The other consonants include: [p], [b], [d] and [k]. Some of the vowels could be written using diacritics. However there are no signs to mark long vowels in Tamil Brahmi language. The other consonants include: [bh], [ch], and [ŋ]. The Tamil script is fairly regular and can be described as an abugida. This means that each consonant has an inherent vowel, called matra, and the vowels are represented by diacritic marks. There are varying number of vowels depending on the context, such as pre-initial or medial, final or terminal. The script also has a character for 'n' to represent dual phonemes 'nn', which however is not used very often. There are also two special vowels that do not correspond to any phonemes in the Spanish alphabet: [aa] and [ā]. They are called "añjali" and "tala". Diacritics can be added above and below any consonant to indicate certain vowel sounds. Diacritics also indicate gemination when two consonants come together, such as [bh] + [ṉ], [ph] + [ṉ], etc. The final element of these clusters is changed in order the phonemes 'bh', 'ph' add up to. There is no character for this combination of phonemes, so the diacritics are used for this purpose. cfa1e77820

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