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Ol Onal

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Ol Onal script
Bhumij written in Ol Onal script
Script type
CreatorMahendra Nath Sardar
Time period
1981 to current
DirectionLeft to Right
RegionOdisha, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Assam (India)
LanguagesBhumij language[a]
Related scripts
Sister systems
Santali script, Mundari Bani
Others: Odia script, Devnagari script, Bengali Script
ISO 15924
ISO 15924Onao (296), ​Ol Onal
Unicode
Unicode alias
Ol Onal
  1. ^ The Bhumij language often considered as a dialect of Mundari language.
 This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For the distinction between [ ], / / and ⟨ ⟩, see IPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.

The Ol Onal, also known as also known as Bhumij Lipi or Bhumij Onal, is an alphabetic writing system for the Bhumij language.[1] Ol Onal script was created between 1981 and 1992 by Ol Guru Mahendra Nath Sardar. Ol Onal script is used to write the Bhumij language in some parts of West Bengal, Jharkhand, Orissa, and Assam.[2][3][4]

Language

Bhumij is a language of the North Munda group of the Austroasiatic languages, spoken mainly in the Indian states of Jharkhand, Odisha and West Bengal. It is spoken by around 100,000 people in India.[5] The language is closely related to the Mundari (mutually intelligible with it but with many differences), Ho, and Santali.

History

File:Mahendra Nath Sardar.jpg
Mahendra Nath Sardar, Creator of Ol Onal script

The Bhumij community had no written language, and knowledge was transmitted orally from one generation to another. Later researchers started to use Devanagari, Bengali, and Odia scripts to document the Bhumij language. However, Bhumijs did not have their own script.

The Ol Onal script was created in between 1981 and 1992 by Mahendra Nath Sardar for writing Bhumij in India. It was initially designed by Sardar as a bicameral script, where the lowercase letters were known as Galang Onal, however only the capital letters called Ol Onal have ben used for teaching and printed books. Sardar wrote many text books in the script (using only Ol Onal capital letters), but there's no known record of Sardar's Galang Onal lowercase letters (which are very different from the taught capitals) ever being used in publications, except in the script author's personal design manuscripts, with various tried variants that Sardar did not promote for wide use in the Bhumij community.

Structure

Ol Onal script

Ol Onal is written from left to right and behaves as a regular alphabet, and not like the typical abugidas used for other Indic scripts: the 6 basic vowels and 20 basic consonants are written as standalone letters (the Ol Chiki alphabet has a similarly structure).

There are three additional signs (referred to as ṭiḍaḥ): the nazalisation sign mu (or mun arang, a dot diacritic used above vowel letters), the lengthening sign ikir (or ikir arang, a dot diacritic used only below the vowel letter a, where it can occur simultaneously with the nasalisation sign mu), and hoddond (a special sign occuring only after the consonant letters ab [b] and uj [b] to indicate their glottalisation).

The script also includes ten decimal digits.

Encoding

Ol Onal has been assigned the Unicode block U+1E5D0–1E5FF for 2024.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Ol Onal". Omniglot.
  2. ^ "Non-Scheduled Indian Languages Resources".[failed verification]
  3. ^ "Tribals demand official status for Bhumij language". Times of India. 17 March 2016.
  4. ^ "Unicode 16.0.0 Core Specs, Chapter 13, section 13.11 Ol Onal".
  5. ^ "Bhumij language and alphabet". omniglot.com. Retrieved 2022-04-19.
  6. ^ Unicode® 16.0.0 (REVIEW DRAFT)