Social Sciences, asked by mayra80, 8 months ago

Ashokan Pillar Inscription in Brahmi Script is at 

Lumbini

Varanasi

Harappa

None of these

Answers

Answered by ponprapanjanprabhu
0

Answer:

Harappa

Explanation:

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Answered by debu06
0

Answer:

Brahmi (/ˈbrɑːmi/; IAST: Brāhmī) is the modern name[2] for a writing system of ancient India.[3] The Brahmi writing system, or script, appeared as a fully developed universal one in South Asia in the third century BCE,[3] and is a forerunner of all writing systems that have found use in South Asia with the exception of the Indus script of the third millennium BCE, the Kharosthi script, which originated in what today is northwestern Pakistan in the fourth or possibly fifth century BCE,[4] the Perso-Arabic Scripts of the medieval period, and the Latin scripts of the modern period.[3] Its descendants, the Brahmic scripts, continue to be in use today not only in South Asia, but also Southeast Asia.[5][6][7] Brahmi is an abugida which uses a system of diacritical marks to associate vowels with consonant symbols.

Type

Abugida

Languages

Sanskrit, Prakrit, Saka, Tamil, Tocharian

Time period

4th or 3rd century BCE[1][a] to 5th century CE

Parent systems

Proto-Sinaitic script?

Phoenician alphabet?

Aramaic alphabet?

Brāhmī

Child systems

Gupta and numerous descendant writing systems

Sister systems

Kharoṣṭhī

Direction

Left-to-right

ISO 15924

Brah, 300

Unicode alias

Brahmi

Unicode range

U+11000–U+1107F

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