This is the Devanagari letter which
represents the sound, "aa," as in the English word, "part."
This letter shares some characteristics with a few other Devanagari vowels, which you will learn later. First, it has what appears to be an English numeral three, that oddly enough does not have the horizontal bar at the top. It has a little tail in the back, which connects it two the first of two vertical bars, both hanging (as you should expect by now) from a straight horizontal line.
If English used this vowel, you might find it beginning such words as, "art" and "awesome." Remember, however, that vowel sounds can either appear at the beginning of a sentence or somewhere else. If they are not at the beginning, they modify a particular consonant's sound. We made this distinction earlier, because each Devanagari vowel has two forms: one for when the vowel sound comes at the beginning of the word, and another when the vowel modifies the sound of a consonant.
You will see that the idea of having two forms of each vowel is not very difficult to use, because the two forms of each vowel are usually quite similar and easy to remember. If you can remember one, you can usually remember the other. The second form of a vowel, the one which changes the sound of a consonant, is called a maatraa (Shankar, 000matra.html).
The maatraa of
, "aa," is very easy to remember: it is simply a straight line
descending from the horizontal bar.
, "aa" is
easy to remember because it is
, "aa,"
after we have removed the "
" part.
therefore stands for
the, "aa" sound at the beginng of a word. If you want the, "aa" sound
somewhere else in a word (that is, changing a consonant's sound from, "a" to,
"aa"), remove the
part to get
, the maatraa of
, "aa."
Confusing? Let's state it a little differently: the Devanagari sound, "aa" is
represented by two forms: the first (
) if the sound comes
at the beginning of the word, and the second (
) if it comes
anywhere else in the word.
Remember that both of these letters make the exact same sound. In fact, they are both different forms of the exact letter. The first form is used if the sound comes at the beginning of a word, and the second form (the "maatraa") is used if the vowel is changing the sound of consonant.
Copyright © 1998-2003 Garret Wilson