I am sorry no one has the answer - neither do I :-( I am looking online now to find what the Balinese script looks like when writing 'Bali' but I can't find that either Good luck! I am sorry no one has the answer - neither do I :-( I am looking online now to find what the Balinese script looks like when writing 'Bali' but I can't find that either Good luck!
Désolé je n'ai pas pu t'aider
In Balinese script, "Love is everything" would be written as "Cinta tisane, pisan". "Family is forever" would be written as "Kula matan, sada". Remember that Balinese script is different from the Latin alphabet and requires proper knowledge to accurately transcribe a phrase.
In order to translate a name into Ogham Script, you must first obtain a copy of the Ogham alphabet. After this, translate the individual letters in the name "Erin".
You would first need to provide us with the conversation to translate.
The primary language spoken in Bali is Balinese, which is widely used in daily communication on the island. Balinese is a Malayo-Polynesian language with its own unique script and vocabulary.
If you mean cedar use google translate
Traditional Balinese alphabet really similar to Javanese unless vocal used in the end of a word is "e" rather than "o" in javanese. The Balinese alphabet known as Carakan escended ultimately from the from Brahmi script of ancient India by way of the Pallava and Old Kawi scripts. The alphabet are : a na ca ra ka da ta sa WA la ma ga ba nga pa ja ya nya
You can get the script in the original Tagalog here: http://www.scribd.com/doc/156507073/Senakulo-Script While not guarenteed to be 100% accurate, here is the same page translated into English via Google Translate: http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.scribd.com%2Fdoc%2F156507073%2FSenakulo-Script&act=url
ahook - your brotherin arabic script : اخوكuhutak - your sisterraisudeen - ramnad - india
JESUS
The Harappan language is difficult to translate because the script used by the ancient Indus Valley civilization has not been deciphered yet. Without a Rosetta Stone equivalent to help in interpreting the language, our understanding of its meaning remains limited, making it challenging to translate.
That is called IDE (Integrated Development Environment). That is a standard tool to see the code-behind and the outcome. For JAVA there is netbeans & eclipse which are popular & free.