Virama ( à ¥Â, (see #Names for other terms) is a Sanskrit phonological concept to suppress the inherent vowel that otherwise occurs with every consonant letter, commonly used as a generic term for a codepoint in Unicode, representing either
Unicode schemes of scripts writing Mainland Southeast Asia languages, such as that of Burmese script and of Tibetan script, generally do not group the two functions together.
The name is Sanskrit for "cessation, termination, end". As a Sanskrit word, it is used in place of several language-specific terms, such as:
In Devanagari and many other Indic scripts, a virama is used to cancel the inherent vowel of a consonant letter and represent a consonant without a vowel, a "dead" consonant. For example, in Devanagari,
If this k is further followed by another consonant letter, for example, á¹£a à ¤·, the result might look like , which represents ká¹£a as ka + (visible) virÃÂma + á¹£a. In this case, two elements k à ¤Âà ¥ and á¹£a à ¤· are simply placed one by one, side by side. Alternatively, ká¹£a can be also written as a ligature , which is actually the preferred form. Generally, when a dead consonant letter C<sub>1</sub> and another consonant letter C<sub>2</sub> are conjoined, the result may be:
If the result is fully or half-conjoined, the (conceptual) virama which made C<sub>1</sub> dead becomes invisible, logically existing only in a character encoding scheme such as ISCII or Unicode. If the result is not ligated, a virama is visible, attached to C<sub>1</sub>, actually written.
Basically, those differences are only glyph variants, and the three forms are semantically identical. Although there may be a preferred form for a given consonant cluster in each language and some scripts do not have some kind of ligatures or half forms at all, it is generally acceptable to use a nonligature form instead of a ligature form even when the latter is preferred if the font does not have a glyph for the ligature. In some other cases, whether to use a ligature or not is just a matter of taste.
The virÃÂma in the sequence C<sub>1</sub> + virÃÂma + C<sub>2</sub> may thus work as an invisible control character to ligate C<sub>1</sub> and C<sub>2</sub> in Unicode. For example,
is a fully conjoined ligature. It is also possible that the virÃÂma does not ligate C<sub>1</sub> and C<sub>2</sub>, leaving the full forms of C<sub>1</sub> and C<sub>2</sub> as they are:
is an example of such a non-ligated form.
The sequences à ¤Âà ¥Âà ¤ à ¤Âà ¥Âà ¤ à ¤Âà ¥Âà ¤ à ¤Âà ¥Âà ¤ , in common Sanskrit orthography, should be written as conjuncts (the virÃÂma and the top cross line of the second letter disappear, and what is left of the second letter is written under the à ¤ and joined to it).
The inherent vowel is not always pronounced, in particular at the end of a word (schwa deletion). No virÃÂma is used for vowel suppression in such cases. Instead, the orthography is based on Sanskrit where all inherent vowels are pronounced, and leaves to the reader of modern languages to delete the schwa when appropriate.