There are several commonly-used vowels that
you need to learn. One of these is the letter
, whose sound will be
represented by the English, "e."
The English letter, "e" can make several sounds. Since Devanagari is phonetic, however, the letter
only produces one sound: the first part of the vowel sound found in the
English word, "cable" (Snell,
11).
As you learned when discussing the letter
, "o," Devanagari vowels are pure, as opposed to many
English vowels which actually combine several sounds. In this case, when an
English-speaker says the word, "cable," he or she says something similar to
"kay eee bull," although this is slightly exaggerated. The Nagari vowel
, "e," on the other hand, does not vary. This is why I say
that the sound corresponds to the first part of the sound found in, "cable."
The vowels you have learned so far all have been similar in shape, all modifications of
, "a." The
vowel
, "e" has a
completely different shape. It has two vertical lines, the first of which has a
"tail" draping down and to the right, while the second has a small, almost
unnoticed hook. In fact, you may want to remember the sound of this letter by the fact
that it has that "tail," which has a similar sound in the
middle. Just a forewarning, though: we will learn one other vowel which is very similar to
, "e," so
don't automatically think that every letter with a "tail" makes the
"e" sound — only this one.
Here is where the rules change slightly: as
usual,
, "e" has a
maatraa, but it is not what you would expect in comparison to the others we have
discussed. The other vowels simply need the "
" part of
the letters removed to form their maatraas.
, "e," in
contrast, is of a completely different form. Its maatraa is a mark which slants upward and
to the left. This mark, like candrabindu, is placed above
the letter which it modifies. Unlike candrabindu,
,
"e" is placed above consonants instead of vowels.
For example, if we were to write, "ek" (English: "one) in Hindi letters,
we would write, 
. However, if we were to write,
"ke" (not actually a word in itself) in Hindi letters, we would write,
. The consonant and the vowel in
the latter case combine to make one letter, pronounced, "ke," as contrasted with
just the consonant
, pronounced,
"ka."
You should be careful not to confuse
, "e" with
the letter
, "o." These
two vowels have the same mark,
above their
respective characters, which may confuse you at first. Remember that the vowel
is always placed above consonants and represents an, "e"
sound, while
is a vowel that
represents the sound, "o."
and CandrabinduYou have already leaned about candrabindu, which is also
placed above letters. In fact, the maatraa
, "e" can
also receive candrabindu; in this case, since
, "e"
already appears above the consonant, the candrabindu also appears above the consonant.
Furthermore, since there are other marks above the horizontal line (specifically, the
maatraa
, "e"), the
second form of candrabindu is used (
, not
).
Using candrabindu with
, "e" seems
much simpler if you first see an example and then read that explanation again.
is "ka,"
is "ke," and
is "ke" nasalized, represented by,
"kE".
Copyright © 1998-2003 Garret Wilson