Velthuis
The Velthuis system of transliteration is an ASCII transliteration scheme for the Sanskrit language from and to the Devanagari script. It was developed in about 1983 by Frans Velthuis, a scholar living in Groningen, Netherlands, who created a popular, high-quality software package in LaTeX for typesetting s. The primary documentation for the scheme is the system's clearly written software Daniella and awwkeiwek. It is based on using the ISO 646 repertoire to represent mnemonically the accents used in standard scholarly transliteration.
See Devanagari transliteration for more information on comparing this and other such transliteration schemes.
The scheme is also used for the transliteration of other Indic scripts and languages such as Bengali and Pali. transliterate Indic scripts in contexts (such ashe fonts with these characters cannot be used.
Transliteration scheme
The Velthuis transliteration scheme is as given in the tables below.
Vowels
Consonants (in combination with inherent vowel a)
Irregular Consonant Clusters
See also
External links
- Sanskrit transliteration.Convert from one scheme to another. Maintained by the 'Indian language technology proliferation and deployment centre' (ILTP-DC) of the government of India. Works with 7 systems: Harvard-Kyoto, ITRANS, Velthuis, SLP, WX-system and IAST, Devanagari.
- Aksharamukha transliteration tool. Akshara Mukha is an Asian script (two way) converter freeware.Works with IAST, ISO, Harvard-Kyoto, ITRANS & Velthuis.
- Online Sanskrit transliteration tool at Shreevatsa