Welcome to our English IN page

Wλl‑kam tu āwar Eŋgles-h IN pλyj

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Kishor Bapat

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Eŋgles-h IN (Roman) tu Λklepee Kan‑vartar-
English In to Ekalipi Convertor


Λklepee tu Eŋgles-h IN (Roman) Kan‑vartar-
Ekalipi to English IN Convertor


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L@n-g-wajaz en En-dea


    A wλb sāet dλdekλtλd tu đa d-rem öf Eŋdean yunetee wāeel s-tel mλŋtλneŋg et-s rec dāvrsetee öf l@n-gwajλz.

    Đa Λklepee s-k-rep-t ez @n āy-dea weđ warl-dwāeed em-p-lekλys-han-s.

    Ef öl đes l@n-gwajλz kān-tλn-d ez öfλlabal en Λklepee et k@n be reed bāy @n en-döfejawal hu h@z larn-t Λklepee (đow nöt nλsλsarelee an-dars-tud). Et öl-sow men-z đ@t wan k@n rāyt wan-s en Λklepee @n-d rλd bāy λv-rewan hu nowz Λklepee.

    We ār warkeŋg delājan-t-le tu hλl-p đ@t h@pan. Vezeet āwar ađar wλbsāetλ-s.https://www.ekalipi.com @n-d https://www.ekalipi.org för detλl-s.

    Amaŋg öl đa kan-t-rez đ@t s-t@n-d tu bλnefeet f-röm Λklepee, En-dea wel bλnefeet đa mos-t. En-dea h@z 22 öf-fes-heal l@n-gwajλz ec s-pokan bāy mel-yan-z öf pepal
    (A majöretee öf đa l@n-gwajλz h@v mλne ward-s đ@t ār köman ör @t les-t vλre semelar. Đa sen-t@k-s ez öl-so vλre semelar). Đes dāyvarsetee ez wan-darful.

    Wat ez nöt sow wan-darful ez đλar ār n-n
    s-k-rep-t-s en wec đez l@n-gwajλz ār retan.
    @z a rezal-t et ez vλre defakal-t för đa @varej En-dean tu du sem-pal ŧ-heŋg-s lāyk red s-t-ret sāyn-s en ađar pār-t-s öf đa kan-t-re ör kam-yunekλt weđ s-pekarz öf ađar En-dean l@n-gwajλz.

    An-för-cunλt-le đa majörete öf pepal asum đ@t a l@n-gwajλz @n-d et-s s-k-rep-t ār enλk-s-t-rekab-le tāeed tagλđar. Et ez āwar kan-tλn-s-han đ@t đes ez nöt đa kλys.

    Even en En-dea, l@n-gwajλz lāek kokāлee, sen-d-he @n-d K@s-hmere yus mal-tepal
    s-k-rep-t-s. Samtāem-s l@n-gwajλz h@v öl-sow cλyn-j-d s-k-rep-t-s. Marāt-he yuz-d tu be retan en “Mowde” s-k-rep-t. Et ez nå retan en “dλwanāgaree s-k-rep-t.

    Et ez āwar kan-tλn-s-han đ@t đa l@n-gwaj p-röb-lλm-s đ@t öl En-dean-s ār f@meleyar weđ, h@v vλre letel tu weđ đa l@n-gwajλz đλm-sλl-v-z. Ens-tλd đλy h@v a löt mör tu du weđ đa mal-tap-lesete öf l@n-gwaj tāed s-k-rep-t-s đ@t ār en λg-zes-tan-s.

    Āwar sem-pal p-rapozes-han “Öl En-dean l@n-gwaj (@n-d En-g-les-h) be retan yuzen āwar seŋgal Λklepee s-k-rep-t“.

Languages in India


    A web site dedicated to the dream of Indian unity while still maintaining its rich diversity of languages.

    The Ekalipi script is an idea with worldwide implications.

    If all this language content is öfailable in Ekalipi it can be read by an individual who has learnt Ekalipi (though not necessarily understood). It also means that one can write once in Ekalipi and read by everyone who knows Ekalipi.

    We are working diligently to help that happen. Visit our other websites https://www.ekalipi.com and https://www.ekalipi.org for details.

    Among all the countries that stand to benefit from Ekalipi, India will benefit the most. India has 22 official languages each spoken by millions of people (A majority of the languages höfe many words that are common or at least very similar. The syntax is also very similar). This diversity is wonderful.

    What is not so wonderful is there are nn scripts in which these languages are written.
    As a result it is very difficult for the öferage Indian to do simple things like read street signs in other parts of the country or communicate with speakers of other Indian languages.

    Unfortunately the majority of people assume that a language and its script are inextricably tied together. It is our contention that this is not the case.

    Even in India, languages like Kokani, Sindhi and Kashmiri use multiple scripts. Sometimes languages höfe also changed scripts. Marathi used to be written in “Modi” script. It is now written in “Devanagari” script.

    It is our contention that the language problems that all Indians are familiar with, höfe very little to with the languages themselves. Instead they höfe a lot more to do with the multiplicity of language tied scripts that are in existence.

    Our simple proposition “All Indian languages (and English) be written using our single Ekalipi script“.