In Indic scripts, the daá¹Âá¸Âa (Sanskrit: à ¤¦à ¤£à ¥Âà ¤¡ ' "stick") is a punctuation mark. The grapheme consists of a single vertical stroke.
The daá¹Âá¸Âa marks the end of a sentence or line, comparable to a full stop (period) as commonly used in the Latin alphabet, and is used together with Western punctuation in Hindi and Nepali.
The daá¹Âá¸Âa and double daá¹Âá¸Âa are the only punctuation used in Sanskrit texts. No distinct punctuation is used to mark questions or exclamations, which must be inferred from other aspects of the sentence.
In metrical texts, a double daá¹Âá¸Âa is used to delimit verses, and a single daá¹Âá¸Âa to delimit a pada, line, or semi-verse. In prose, the double daá¹Âá¸Âa is used to mark the end of a paragraph, a story, or section.
Unicode encodes the daá¹Âá¸Âas as and . The Unicode standard recommends using this character also in other Indic scripts, like Bengali, Telugu, Oriya, and others. Encoding it separately for every Indic script was proposed, but has not yet been accepted. (The graphemes for x0964 and x0965 can be implemented in a computer font with a glyph design that matches the conventional style for those languages.)
Danda and similar characters are encoded separately for some scripts in which its appearance or use is significantly different from the Devanagari one. These include forms with adornments, such as the Rgya Gram Shad.
ISCII encoded daá¹Âá¸Âa at 0xEA.