🇮🇳 Australian Punjabi Learning Resource ਸਤਿ ਸ੍ਰੀ ਅਕਾਲ — Sat Sri Akal
ਪੈਂਤੀ ਅੱਖਰ

The Gurmukhi Alphabet — 35 Letters of Punjabi

Every letter, every sound, every example — the complete Gurmukhi alphabet with pronunciation guidance written for English speakers.

💡 The best news about Gurmukhi: It is a perfectly phonetic script. Every letter has one sound, and every sound has one letter. There are no silent letters, no irregular spellings, and no exceptions. Once you know the 35 letters, you can read any Punjabi word written in Gurmukhi — even if you don't know what it means.

What is Gurmukhi?

Gurmukhi (ਗੁਰਮੁਖੀ) literally means "from the mouth of the Guru." The script was formalised by Guru Angad Dev Ji, the second Sikh Guru, in the 16th century, based on earlier Landa merchants' scripts used across Punjab. His purpose was to make the Sikh sacred writings (Gurbani) accessible to ordinary Punjabi people in a standardised, learnable form. Today, Gurmukhi is the official script of Punjab (India) and is used for all written Punjabi in the Indian subcontinent, as well as in diaspora communities worldwide including Australia.

Gurmukhi belongs to the Brahmic family of scripts, related to Devanagari (used for Hindi) and other South Asian scripts. Like all Brahmic scripts, it is written left to right, and consonants carry an inherent vowel sound that can be modified with vowel signs called matras.

Before You Start — The Concept of the Inherent Vowel

In Gurmukhi, every consonant letter has an inherent "a" vowel sound built in. So ਕ is not just "k" — it's "ka." To write "ki," you add the sihari matra (ਿ) before the letter: ਕਿ. To write "ku," you add the aunkar matra (ੁ) below: ਕੁ. This vowel-modification system (matras) is explained in detail after the main alphabet table. Understanding this concept first will make the alphabet make much more sense.

The 35 Painti Akhar — Complete Table

Click on any row to anchor to that letter. Use the sidebar to jump to a specific letter. Practice pronouncing each sound aloud as you read — muscle memory is built through repetition.

#LetterNameHow to PronounceExample WordMeaning
1 Ura Carrier for vowels — no consonant sound of its own ਉਮਰ Age (umar)
2 Aara Open "a" sound — like "a" in "about" ਅੱਜ Today (ajj)
3 Eeri Carrier for front vowels — like "e" before a vowel ਇੱਕ One (ikk)
4 Sassa Like "s" in "sun" ਸੂਰਜ Sun (sooraj)
5 Haha Like "h" in "house" ਹੱਥ Hand (hath)
6 Kakka Like "k" in "skin" — unaspirated ਕਿਤਾਬ Book (kitaab)
7 Khakha Aspirated k — puff of air after the sound ਖਾਣਾ Food (khaana)
8 Gagga Like "g" in "go" ਗੁਰੂ Guru (guroo)
9 Ghagha Aspirated g — breathy g sound ਘਰ Home (ghar)
10 Nganga Like "ng" in "ring" — rare in modern use ਪੰਜਾਬ Punjab
11 Chacha Like "ch" in "chair" ਚਾਹ Tea (chaa)
12 Chhachha Aspirated ch — stronger puff after ch ਛੱਤਰੀ Umbrella (chhatri)
13 Jajja Like "j" in "jump" ਜਲ Water (jal)
14 Jhajha Aspirated j — breathy j sound ਝੀਲ Lake (jheel)
15 Nyanya Like "ny" in "canyon" — rare in modern use
16 Tatta Retroflex t — tongue curled back against palate ਟੋਪੀ Hat (topi)
17 Thatha Aspirated retroflex t ਠੰਡ Cold (thand)
18 Dadda Retroflex d — tongue curled back ਡੱਬਾ Box (dabba)
19 Dhadha Aspirated retroflex d ਢੋਲ Drum (dhol)
20 Nanna Retroflex n — tongue curled back ਪਾਣੀ Water (paani)
21 Tatta Dental t — like "t" in French, tongue touches teeth ਤਾਰਾ Star (taara)
22 Thatha Aspirated dental t — NOT English "th" ਥਾਂ Place (thaan)
23 Dadda Dental d — tongue touches teeth ਦਿਲ Heart (dil)
24 Dhadha Aspirated dental d — like "dh" in "dharma" ਧੁੱਪ Sunshine (dhupp)
25 Nanna Like "n" in "no" ਨੱਕ Nose (nakk)
26 Pappa Like "p" in "spin" — unaspirated ਪਾਣੀ Water (paani)
27 Phaphha Aspirated p — puff of air, like English p at word start ਫੁੱਲ Flower (phull)
28 Babba Like "b" in "bat" ਬੱਚਾ Child (bachcha)
29 Bhabha Aspirated b — like "bh" in "Bhangra" ਭੁੱਖ Hunger (bhukh)
30 Mamma Like "m" in "mother" ਮਾਂ Mother (maa)
31 Yayya Like "y" in "yes" ਯਾਰ Friend (yaar)
32 Rara Rolled r — tip of tongue taps the ridge behind upper teeth ਰਾਤ Night (raat)
33 Lalla Like "l" in "love" ਲੱਖ One lakh (lakh)
34 Vava Like "v" in "vine" — sometimes sounds like "w" ਵਕਤ Time (vakat)
35 Rarra Retroflex flap r — tongue flaps back, unique to Punjabi ਖੜ੍ਹਾ Standing (khara)

The Three Carrier Letters

The first three letters — ੳ (Ura), ਅ (Aara), and ੲ (Eeri) — are unique in Gurmukhi. They are "carrier letters" that don't have consonant sounds of their own. Instead, they carry vowel sounds when a word begins with a vowel. Think of them as vowel holders:

CarrierNameVowels it carriesExamples
Uraਉ (u), ਊ (oo)ਉਮਰ (umar — age), ਊਠ (ooth — camel)
Aaraਅ (a), ਆ (aa)ਅੱਜ (ajj — today), ਆਮ (aam — mango)
Eeriਇ (i), ਈ (ee), ਏ (e), ਐ (ai)ਇੱਕ (ikk — one), ਈਦ (eid — Eid)

Vowel Signs — Matras (ਲਗਾਂ ਮਾਤਰਾਂ)

Matras are vowel signs that attach to consonant letters to change their vowel sound. The inherent vowel of any consonant is "a" — adding a matra overrides this. Here are all the matras shown on the consonant ਕ (ka):

MatraNameSoundOn ਕExample word
Aara (long a)"aa" as in "father"ਕਾ (kaa)ਕਾਲਾ — black
ਿSihari (short i)"i" as in "bit" — written BEFORE the letterਕਿ (ki)ਕਿਤਾਬ — book
Bihari (long ee)"ee" as in "feet"ਕੀ (kee)ਕੀ? — what?
Aunkar (short u)"u" as in "put"ਕੁ (ku)ਕੁੱਤਾ — dog
Dulainkar (long oo)"oo" as in "food"ਕੂ (koo)ਕੂੜਾ — rubbish
Lavan (long e)"e" as in "they"ਕੇ (ke)ਕੇਲਾ — banana
Dulavan (ai)"ai" as in "air"ਕੈ (kai)ਕੈਦ — imprisonment
Hora (long o)"o" as in "go"ਕੋ (ko)ਕੋਈ — anyone
Kanora (au/ow)"au" as in "caught"ਕੌ (kau)ਕੌਮ — nation
The Sihari matra is written BEFORE the letter it modifies, even though it's pronounced after. So ਕਿ is read "ki" not "ik." This is the single most common source of confusion for new Gurmukhi readers — be aware of it from day one.

Special Marks

MarkNameFunctionExample
AddakDoubles the following consonant (gemination)ਕੱਚਾ (kachcha — raw/unripe)
BindiNasalises the preceding vowelਹਾਂ (haan — yes)
TippiNasalises short vowelsਪੰਜ (panj — five)
NuktaAdds a dot below to create sounds borrowed from Persian/Arabicਜ਼ (z), ਫ਼ (f), ਸ਼ (sh)
DandaFull stop / sentence endਮੈਂ ਜਾਂਦਾ ਹਾਂ।

How to Remember the Letters

Research on language learning consistently shows that spaced repetition is the most effective way to memorise new characters. Rather than studying all 35 letters in one sitting, learn 5 letters per day and review them with flashcards daily. Within a week you'll have the full alphabet. Within two weeks you'll be reading simple words. Key strategies that work for Australian learners:

  • Use the flashcard tool daily — even 5 minutes a day compounds rapidly over weeks
  • Write the letters by hand — motor memory reinforces visual recognition significantly
  • Group letters by similarity — many Gurmukhi letters look similar, so learning them in pairs helps (ਨ and ਮ, ਕ and ਖ)
  • Read Gurbani — if your family is Sikh, you likely hear Gurbani regularly; trying to follow along in the printed Gutka is powerful practice
  • Label objects at home — stick Gurmukhi labels on common objects so you see the script constantly
🎓 VCE Students: Gurmukhi reading and writing accuracy is assessed across all sections of the VCE Punjabi exam. Examiners expect correct Gurmukhi spelling — not just accurate romanisation. Practise writing by hand, not just typing, as the written exam requires handwritten Gurmukhi.
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