Saral, meaning simple in Hindi, is a monolinear design supporting most Devanagari based languages. Derived from the older Linotype typeface Rohini, it has been greatly expanded into three weights and a wide character set. Saral Light, Regular, and Bold are made to coordinate with the respective weights of Helvetica. Download Hindi Saral-DEMO font free for Windows and Mac. We have a huge collection of around 72,000 TrueType and OpenType free fonts, checkout more on FontPalace.com. Com are either GNU/GPL. 2015 Yuxar Consulting Corp, fonts available at Fonts2u. Unauthorized duplication or use is prohibited; direction Only strongly left to right glyphs + contains neutrals, although we have indicated the license type, free Hindi Saral 2 Fonts, height corpus size Any.
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Indian language fonts - Free
There are 100s of free Unicode fonts available on the net for various Indian languages like Tamil, Hindi, Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Konkani, Gujarati, Bengali, Punjabi, Oriya, Assamese, Kashmiri, Sourashtra, etc. Links to download the same are given below. Please note that these fonts were not developed by me but by other developers. Hence, links below (Link1, Link2, etc.) will take you to external sites. You can download the Unicode fonts by clicking the download links available therein and/or following the instructions therein.e-Grantamil Unicode Font for typing in Grantha using Azhagi+
- To download e-Grantamil font, please visit this page. Scroll down to the very bottom. Therein, you can find the download link.
- Please note that e-Grantamil font is a Unicode font wherein Grantha characters are placed in the Bengali Unicode Block. So, before availing Azhagi+'s Grantha XML to start typing in Grantha, you need to download and install the e-Grantamil font. Otherwise, when you type using Azhagi+'s Grantha XML, only Bengali characters will get displayed. Azhagi+'s Grantha XML can be downloaded from here.
Link2 - http://www.ildc.in/index.html
Link3 - http://info.webdunia.com/downloadfont.htm
Link4 - http://tdil.mit.gov.in
Link5 - http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/t/ttf-indic-fonts
Link6 - A few good Malayalam Unicode fonts
Link7 - 100s of free Tamil Unicode fonts - http://azhagi.com/freefonts.html#unicode
Link8 - fonts installed automatically, along with Microsoft products
Note: 'ttf-indic-fonts_0.5.10.tar.gz' in Link5 above contains fonts for all prominent Indian languages in one single archive with fonts for each language already segregated in separate folders.
Extracting fonts
If the fonts you download are inside archived files - .zip, .deb, .tgz, etc. - then, to extract them, use applications like Winzip or 7zip. Note that to extract files from '.tgz' archives, you can use Winzip; to extract files from '.deb' archives, you can use 7zip.
Fonts provided by Microsoft
MS has developed Unicode fonts specific to each Indian language. They are loaded along with the installation of the OS (operating system) itself or along with the installation of certain Microsoft products. A list of them is as follows.
Language | Font Name |
Tamil | Latha (Win2K & above), Vijaya (Win7 & above) |
Hindi, Sanskrit, Marathi, etc. | Mangal (Win2K & above), Aparajitha (Win7 & above) |
Telugu | Gautami (WinXP & above), Vani (Win7 & above) |
Kannada | Tunga (WinXP & above) |
Malayalam | Kartika (WinXP-SP2 & above) |
Gujarati | Shruti (WinXP & above) |
Bengali | Vrinda (Win XP-SP2 & above), Shonar Bangla (Win7 & above) |
Punjabi | Raavi (WinXP & above) |
Oriya | Kalinga (WinVista and above) |
Arial Unicode MS#, Nirmala UI# | All Indian languages# (Office 2002 and above) |
Similar to 'aum', there is another font called 'Nirmala UI' from MS, which comes along with Win8 & above and also gets installed when Office 2013 is installed. For details, please see this page.
Code2000 font
Apart from 'aum', there is also a shareware font called Code2000 ('c2k' for short), which also compries all characters of almost all prominent Indian languages. So, whether you find 'aum' in your system or not, you shall download 'c2k' font. Our sincere thanks should go to the author of 'c2k' for his EXTREMELY painstaking effort in creating such a wonderful font. 'c2k' is available for download here - http://www.code2000.net/code2000_page.htm. Visit this page and navigate to the bottom of this page. Therein, you will find the link to download this font. After downloading, unzip the downloaded file (code2000.zip) and extract the font (code2000.ttf) to 'c:windowsfonts' directory. That is all to it.
How to install the downloaded fonts?
In case you are new to computers and do not know how to install the Indic (Indian language) fonts you download, then follow instructions below, which are for Windows XP operating system. The instructions for other operating systems are not given, as they are almost similar.
After saving or extracting (if the font is inside an archived file - .zip, .deb, .tgz, etc. - to extract files from '.tgz' archives, you can use Winzip; to extract files from '.deb' archives, you can use 7zip) the font to a folder of your choice in your system, you can opt to do one of the following.
- Option-1: Copy/Paste or Drag/Drop the font file (say Tscu_Comic.ttf) into the 'Fonts' folder (usually 'C:WindowsFonts')
- Option-2: Navigate* to the 'Fonts' folder (usually 'C:WindowsFonts'). Click 'File->Install New Font', select the folder where you have saved/extracted the font to be installed and click OK.
There are a few visitors who are accustomed only to fonts similar to Typewriter fonts and hence assume that all the fonts downloaded from the above links can be straightaway used for typing in Sanskrit, Hindu, Telugu, etc. by selecting them from the fonts list of an editor like MS-Word. If you are one like them, then please note that not all Indic fonts are monolingual fonts. Monolingual fonts enable you to type only in one language. For example, 'Kruti Dev' font (available for download from indiatyping.com site). Using 'Kruti Dev' font, you can type only in Hindi. Contrary to monolingual fonts, there are bilingual fonts. For example, 'Mangal' font, which is in Unicode encoding. Using 'Mangal', you can type in both English and Hindi. Most of the fonts you download using the above links will be in that category. Apart from monolingual and bilingual fonts, there are multilingual
Hindi Saral 3 Font Download
fonts (e.g. Arial Unicode MS - you can type in English, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Bengali, etc., etc., etc.) and also bilingual/multiencodedHindi Saral 1 Font
fonts (e.g. Tscu_SaiIndira - you can type in both Tscii and Unicode and in both English and Tamil).Income Tax Form Saral 2
Considering the above, when you select a multilingual (e.g. Arial Unicode MS) or bilingual font (e.g. Mangal) from the fonts list of an editor (e.g. MS Word) and start typing, you can type in English only and NOT in Hindi. If you wish to type in Hindi, then you need* a software like Azhagi/Azhagi+ up and running or you need any other tool/utility/mechanism - which will display the Hindi characters from that multilingual/bilingual font.
Out of goodwill, I have listed the above information about 'unicode fonts' developed by various other entities. Otherwise, whether any of the above 'unicode fonts' is still free or not (OR) how any of the above 'fonts' exactly function (OR) whether the above 'fonts' function accurately or error-free, etc. etc. is entirely under the control of the respective authors only. I, personally, do not have any indepth idea of the various aspects of the other 'fonts'. As such, you can consider that I have just shared some information on other 'fonts'. That is all. So, use of any of the above 'fonts' is entirely upto your discretion. In other words, it is absolutely at your own risk to download/install/try/use any of the other 'fonts'. Also, please note that links to any of the above 'fonts' were valid links at the time of my mentioning them first in this page only. Whether these links remain valid all the time thereafter is not under my control, naturally. For my part, I do check the correctness of some of these links randomly, once in a while.