this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2026
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धन्यवाद
This is exactly what I was after. Thank you. Other than being patient and careful any hints for writing Hindi or Punjabi on a whiteboard? If I make small mistakes am I likely to offend anyone? I would rather like to use Devanagari and Gurmukhi (I think those are the correct names for the scripts) if I can mange it.
Umm... If you write दिन as दीन, it is supposed to sound different. First is din (shorter e sound), second one would be spoken as deen (llonger e sound). In some cases words could mean something else if these vowel sounds are different, but would not offend anyone. Same thing in Gurmukhi. Also, Punjabi can be written in Shahmukhi script (in which Urdu is written) which is actually the standard in Pakistan. In India, it is written in Gurumukhi only.
Wow, thanks I didn't realise there were regional differences in the script. I'm not sure if there any Pakistani or Indian students in the class so maybe I should stick to the Hindi version so that no one feels overlooked. Between the Hindi, Japanese and Cantonese it looks like I will be getting a lot of practise reproducing script I can't read before I give them a go. I think I have enough people who can proof read my practise and let me know if I am close enough. This is seeming like it will be a bigger commitment (and more fun) than I expected. Wish me luck.