🇮🇳 Assamese (Bengali-derived) → Latin Script

Assamese Romanization

Type Assamese (অসমীয়া) in Assamese (Bengali-derived) and get the instant romanized Latin script version — plus an English translation. No button, no wait.

Assamese (Bengali-derived) → LatinReal-Time RomanizationEnglish TranslationOne-Click Copy100% Free
Romanizes automatically as you type · Assamese (Bengali-derived) → Latin script
Type in Assamese (অসমীয়া)0/3000
🔤 Romanization (Latin script)
Romanized text will appear here…
🌐 English Meaning
English translation will appear here…

Example Romanization

Assamese (Bengali-derived) (Original)

নমস্কাৰ, আপুনি কেনে আছে?

Romanized (Latin script)

Namaskāra, āpuni kēne āche?

Assamese Language Profile

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Assamese

অসমীয়া

ScriptAssamese (Bengali-derived)
DirectionLTR
Speakers23M+
RegionSouth Asia

About Assamese Romanization

Assamese is the official language of Assam, Northeast India. Its script is derived from the Eastern Nagari script and is closely related to Bengali. Assam is famous for its tea industry and the one-horned rhinoceros.

What Is Assamese Romanization Used For?

Assamese name romanization
Northeast India travel content (Kaziranga, Majuli)
Bihu festival content in Latin script
Assam tea industry terminology
Northeast India academic research

Who Uses This Tool?

Northeast India travel writers, Assamese diaspora communities, researchers of Northeast Indian languages, and wildlife tourism professionals covering Kaziranga National Park.

About Assamese (অসমীয়া) and Its Script

Assamese is spoken by 23M+ people, primarily in South Asia. It uses the Assamese (Bengali-derived) writing system, which is written left to right.

Romanization (also called transliteration) converts Assamese (Bengali-derived) characters to their equivalent Latin (Roman) letter representations. This allows speakers of Latin-script languages to read and pronounce Assamese text without knowing the Assamese (Bengali-derived) script.

This tool uses Google's neural romanization engine to convert Assamese text to Latin script in real time. The romanization follows standard transliteration conventions and is updated automatically 800ms after you stop typing — no button click required.

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