Devanagari: Pagkakaiba sa mga binago

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Linya 5:
|caption=Devanagari script (vowels top, consonants bottom) in [[Chandas font]].
|type=[[Abugida]]
|languages=[[Angika language|Angika]], [[Awadhi language|Awadhi]], [[Bhili language|Bhili]], [[Bhojpuri language|Bhojpuri]], [[Bodo language|Bodo]], [[Chhattisgarhi language|Chhattisgarhi]], [[Dogri language|Dogri]], [[Haryanvi language|Haryanvi]], [[Hindi]], [[Kashmiri language|Kashmiri]], [[Konkani language|Konkani]], [[Magahi language|Magahi]], [[Maithili language|Maithili]], [[Marathi language|Marathi]], [[Mundari language|Mundari]], [[Nepali language|Nepali]], [[Newar language|Newar]], [[Wikang Pali|Pali]], [[Rajasthani language|Rajasthani]], [[Sanskrit]], [[Santali language|Santali]], [[Sindhi language|Sindhi]] and many more
|time=Early signs: 1st century CE,<ref name=gazett/> modern form: 10th century CE<ref name="taylor2003">{{Citation | title=History of the Alphabet: Aryan Alphabets, Part 2 | author=Isaac Taylor | year=1883 | isbn=978-0-7661-5847-4 |publisher= Kegan Paul, Trench & Co | url=https://archive.org/stream/alphabet00unkngoog#page/n348/mode/2up/|page=333 | quote=''...&nbsp;In the Kutila this develops into a short horizontal bar, which, in the Devanagari, becomes a continuous horizontal line ... three cardinal inscriptions of this epoch, namely, the Kutila or Bareli inscription of 992, the [[Chalukya]] or Kistna inscription of 945, and a Kawi inscription of 919 ... the Kutila inscription is of great importance in Indian epigraphy, not only from its precise date, but from its offering a definite early form of the standard Indian alphabet, the Devanagari ...''}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book| publisher = Oxford University Press| isbn = 978-0-19-509984-3| last = Salomon| first = Richard| title = Indian epigraphy: a guide to the study of inscriptions in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and the other Indo-Aryan languages| location = Oxford| series = South Asia research| date = 1998|pp=39–41}}</ref>
|region=India and Nepal