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Gujarati

Gujarati (ગુજરાતી) may refer to:

  • anything from or related to Gujarat, a state of India
  • Gujarati people, the major ethnic group of Gujarat
  • Gujarati language, the Indo-Aryan language spoken by them
  • Gujarati script
    • Gujarati (Unicode block), a block of Gujarati characters in Unicode
  • Gujarati, a style of sari draping
Gujarati (Unicode block)

Gujarati is a Unicode block containing characters for writing the Gujarati language. In its original incarnation, the code points U+0A81..U+0AD0 were a direct copy of the Gujarati characters A1-F0 from the 1988 ISCII standard. The Devanagari, Bengali, Gurmukhi, Oriya, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, and Malayalam blocks were similarly all based on their ISCII encodings.

Usage examples of "gujarati".

Indra Network News, broadcasting live to the quarter-billion Gujarati market.

Golden embroidery glittered on a jacket woven of the finest Gujarati silk.

The air was thick with tobacco smoke and the cadences of Swahili and Gujarati and Xhosa.

I thought at first it was another alphabet and language, something like Bengali or Gujarati, but when I looked more closely I decided it was not real writing but gibberish, like something a child scribbles, pretending to write.

Jack heard commands uttered in Gujarati, then the welcome creak of the pulley.

They dropped their armaments and held forth their hands beseechingly and pleaded with him in Gujarati for a while.

He must be the only Gujarati on the Bombay police force, Farrokh thought, for surely the local police were mostly Maharashtrians.

For a Gujarati to make the move from an inspector at the Colaba Station to a deputy commissioner in Crime Branch Headquarters at Crawford Market required what is called greasing the wheel.

The lead chimp was dressed as a Gujarati milkman, which the local crowd loved.

The population comprises several distinct races or castes, who, while speaking a common dialect, Gujarati, inhabit separate villages.

Mohandas, was a quiet man, shy and softly spoken even in his native Gujarati and more so when required to converse in English, though he was quite fluent.

India he laboured indefatigably at the vernaculars, and his reward was an astonishingly rapid proficiency in Gujarati, Marathi, Hindustani, as well as Persian and Arabic.

Bombay, this time with Lalubhai, a Gujarati gentleman closely associated with U.