The Letter r

ra We now come to the letter, ra, which makes the sound, "ra," which rhymes with ka, "ka," and ya, "ya."

This should look familiar. We of course have that solid horizontal line from which the letter "hangs," but other than that ra, "ra" looks just like a capital English, "R." You'll have no trouble at all remembering this letter.

This is the first letter you've seen that doesn't have the vertical line descending from the horizontal line, but don't worry about that. You've seen the letter, "R" most of your life. Look at the similarities: "R" and ra. To write ra, "ra", you would simply draw the horizontal bar, then draw the English letter, "R" without the vertical bar!

The Devanagari letter, ra, "ra," does not make exactly the same sound as the English, "r." Instead, it is shorter; your tongue taps the top of your mouth and almost trills the "ra" sound, similar to a Scottish pronunciation of the English, "r." Try saying, "hurt" and then "heard;" the Hindi sound is still shorter, but you can try to use the "rd" sound when saying "rdead" and "wrdite" and "rdun" The "tapping" sound always present, in contrast to the English word, "more," which has no tapping sound at all (Snell, 10).

Now say all the letters you've learned so far:

ka: ka. ka. ka.

ya: ya. ya. ya.

ra: ra. ra. ra.