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All of the major languages of India and most of the minority languages are included in unicode.

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Q: Which Indian languages are included in unicode?
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Related questions

What are the advantages of unicode?

Unicode is intended to account for as many languages and symbols as possible while ASCII only covers a small subset. (English and some European languages).


This coding system is designed to support international languages like Chinese and Japanese?

unicode or ansic


Coding scheme capable of representing almost all the worlds current written languages?

That sounds like a quiz question asking for the answer Unicode.


Is unicode limited to languages that do not use the English alphabet?

No. Unicode includes (or has the capability to include) every language on Earth, including English.


Which Indo-Aryan language was included in the official list of languages in the 8th schedule of the Indian constitution in 1967?

Sindhi


What is the difference between ASCII and Unicode?

ASCII is a set of digital codes widely used as a standard fromat in the transfer of text. Unicode is an international encoding standard for used with different languages and scripts


What is different between unicode and ascii?

ASCII is a set of digital codes widely used as a standard fromat in the transfer of text. Unicode is an international encoding standard for used with different languages and scripts


What is a coding scheme capable of representing all the worlds written languages as well as classic and historical languages?

Unicode is a coding scheme capable of representing all the world's written languages, including classic and historical languages. It is a standard character encoding system that assigns a unique number to every character across different writing systems and scripts, making it possible to support a vast range of languages and scripts across digital platforms.


What standard promises to provide enough characters to cover all the world's languages?

The Uninicide Standard causes people


What are two indian scripting languages?

Indo-Aryan and Dravidian are the two Indian Scripting languages.


When was Center for American Indian Languages created?

Center for American Indian Languages was created in 2004.


What languages are used in Unicode?

There are very few modern languages that cannot use Unicode. Unicode can also be used from some obsolete languages as well, such as ancient Akkadian, Ugaritic, Old Persian. and so forth. The most basic Egyptian hieroglyphics will be added in the next version, 5.1 along withThe Unicode website at http://www.unicode.org/standard/WhatIsUnicode.html provides the English phrase "What is Unicode" translated into 48 languages and there are far more than that not do not appear here, for example all current American Indian languages that use a version of the Latin script or which use the Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllables are covered by Unicode.We are told at http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode5.1.0/ that Version 5.1 of Unicode due out next week "extends support for languages in Africa, India, Indonesia, Myanmar, and Vietnam, with the addition of the Cham, Lepcha, Ol Chiki, Rejang, Saurashtra, Sundanese, and Vai scripts."Accordingly when this question appears in the Unicode FAQ at http://unicode.org/faq/basic_q.html#16 , the consortium's answer is:"It's hard to say. Many scripts (especially Latin) are used for a very large number of languages. The easiest answer is that Unicode covers all the languages that can be written in the following scripts: Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Armenian, Hebrew, Arabic, Syriac, Thaana, Devanagari, Bengali, Gurmukhi, Oriya, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Sinhala, Thai, Lao, Tibetan, Myanmar, Georgian, Hangul, Ethiopic, Cherokee, Canadian-Aboriginal Syllabics, Ogham, Runic, Tagalog, Hanunóo, Buhid, Tagbanwa, Khmer, Mongolian, Limbu, Tai Le, Han (Japanese, Chinese, Korean ideographs), Hiragana, Katakana, Bopomofo, Yi, Linear B, Old Italic, Gothic, Ugaritic, Deseret, Shavian, Osmanya, and Cypriot.. See also the list of Languages and Scripts. [MD]"Note that this leaves out some of the scripts in Unicode 5.0 (such as some Philippino scripts) as well as some of the scripts to come in version 5.1. Modern languages still missing would those of small minority communities with unique scripts where no-one has come forth the present the encoding and the Unicode consortium has not got around to doing so themselves as yet. I some cases there is dispute about how a script should be encoded.The intention is that almost very language known should be encoded in Unicode, with the exception of some modern invented languages of dubious importance. Essentially, if those using such languages don't themselves use a script different from Latin or Arabic or such, even though one may have been invented, then it is not going to be encoded. The only such script which has been rejected (for the moment) from Unicode is Klingon, because the supposed alphabet is rarely used even by those who known Klingon and was not used with the supposed proper values in the flms themsleves. This is the only that I know about where a script was rejected.