All vowels, consonants, chillu letters & compound characters — with transliteration, pronunciation guide, script history, and a 7-day learning plan.
Malayalam letters look ornate and unfamiliar at first — and that is completely normal. The script is one of the most visually distinctive writing systems in the world, with its characteristic rounded curves and flowing loops. But here is the reassuring truth: the Malayalam script is entirely phonetic. Every letter has exactly one sound. There are no silent letters, no irregular spellings, no exceptions. Once you learn the sounds of each letter, you can read anything written in Malayalam — even if you do not understand the meaning yet.
For NRI families, the script is often the missing piece. Children may understand spoken Malayalam at home but cannot read a menu, a festival invitation, or a grandmother’s letter. For heritage speakers reconnecting with the language, learning the script unlocks everything — songs, books, the Ramayana, and WhatsApp messages from relatives. This guide gives you the full picture, from the first vowel to the most complex conjunct letter.
The Malayalam script did not spring fully formed from the earth. It evolved — slowly, over centuries — from the Grantha script, an ancient writing system used across South India to write Sanskrit. The transition from Grantha to a distinctly Malayalam script happened between the 13th and 16th centuries, as the Malayalam language itself was becoming distinct from its parent language, Tamil-Brahmi.
The father of modern Malayalam literature — and in many ways the father of the script itself — is Thunchaththu Ezhuthachan, a 16th-century poet from Tirur in Malappuram. His name literally means “the writer of the lower house” — a humble title that belies his monumental contribution. Ezhuthachan standardised Malayalam orthography through his translations of the Ramayana and Mahabharata, giving the language a literary framework that endured for 400 years. The word ezhuthu (writing/letter) in Malayalam is itself a testament to his legacy.
By the mid-20th century, traditional Malayalam script had over 900 unique character combinations — making it virtually impossible to typeset on mechanical printing presses. In 1971, the Kerala government and the Department of Public Instruction introduced a simplified script reform that reduced these combinations dramatically by separating conjunct letters into their component parts.
The result: two coexisting script systems. The reformed script (parishkarana lipi) is used in newspapers, textbooks, and most digital content. The traditional script (samskrutha lipi / grantha lipi) is used in classical literature, religious texts, and by older generations. Both are considered correct. This is why you may see the same word written differently in different contexts — and why some Malayalam fonts look very different from others.
For the modern learner, this history has a practical consequence: start with the reformed script. It is what you will see in 95% of digital content, school textbooks, and everyday reading. Once you are confident with it, classical texts become accessible with a little extra study.
The answer depends slightly on which system you use — but here is the breakdown every learner needs:
| Category | Malayalam Term | Count | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vowels | സ്വരാക്ഷരങ്ങൾ (Swaraksharangal) | 13 | The foundation — learn these first. |
| Consonants | വ്യഞ്ജനാക്ഷരങ്ങൾ (Vyanjanangal) | 36 | Grouped into 7 families by place of articulation. |
| Chillu letters | ചില്ലക്ഷരങ്ങൾ (Chillaksharam) | 5 | Pure consonant endings — appear at word ends. |
| Anuswara & Visarga | അനുസ്വാരം / വിസർഗം | 2 | Special modifiers used mainly in Sanskrit words. |
| Total (standard) | — | 53–56 | Varies by counting method — 53 is most common in modern textbooks. |
There are 13 vowels in Malayalam. They are the first thing to learn — not just because they come first in the alphabet, but because every consonant is modified by a vowel sign. Master the vowels and you have the key to the entire system.
| # | Vowel | Transliteration | Sound (English Reference) | Example Word | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | അ | a | Short “u” as in “sun” | അമ്മ | Mother (amma) |
| 2 | ആ | aa | Long “a” as in “father” | ആന | Elephant (aana) |
| 3 | ഇ | i | Short “i” as in “it” | ഇല | Leaf (ila) |
| 4 | ഈ | ee | Long “ee” as in “feed” | ഈച്ച | Fly (eeacha) |
| 5 | ഉ | u | Short “oo” as in “put” | ഉണ്ണി | Baby boy (unni) |
| 6 | ഊ | oo | Long “oo” as in “food” | ഊഞ്ഞാൽ | Swing (oojaal) |
| 7 | ഋ | ri | Sanskrit “ri” — as in “river” (brief) | ഋഷി | Sage/Rishi (rishi) |
| 8 | എ | e | Short “e” as in “bed” | എലി | Rat (eli) |
| 9 | ഏ | ey | Long “ay” as in “say” | ഏണി | Ladder (eeni) |
| 10 | ഐ | ai | “ai” as in “aisle” | ഐശ്വര്യം | Prosperity (aishwaryam) |
| 11 | ഒ | o | Short “o” as in “orange” | ഒട്ടകം | Camel (ottakam) |
| 12 | ഓ | oo | Long “oh” as in “go” | ഓന | Onam (ona) |
| 13 | ഔ | au | “ow” as in “cow” | ഔഷധം | Medicine (aushadham) |
When vowels appear after a consonant, they are written as vowel signs (matras) — small marks attached above, below, before, or after the consonant. This is the most important concept in Malayalam reading. The consonant ക (ka) changes its sound entirely depending on which vowel sign is attached.
| Consonant + Sign | Combined Letter | Sound | Example Word |
|---|---|---|---|
| ക (no sign = default “a”) | ക | ka | കടൽ (kadal) — sea |
| ക + ാ | കാ | kaa | കാടി (kaadi) — forest |
| ക + ി | കി | ki | കിളി (kili) — bird |
| ക + ീ | കീ | kee | കീഴ് (keezh) — below |
| ക + ു | കു | ku | കുട (kuda) — umbrella |
| ക + ൂ | കൂ | koo | കൂടം (koodam) — cage |
| ക + െ | കെ | ke | കെടുക (keduka) — to put out |
| ക + േ | കേ | key | കേൾക്കുക (kelkkuka) — to listen |
| ക + ൊ | കൊ | ko | കൊക്ക് (kokku) — heron |
| ക + ോ | കോ | koh | കോഴി (kozhi) — chicken |
| ക + ൈ | കൈ | kai | കൈ (kai) — hand |
Reading a guide is a great start — but hearing the sounds from a native speaker makes pronunciation click far faster. Decode Malayalam’s structured beginner courses include live script practice sessions with audio guidance.
🎓 Book Your Free Demo Class →Malayalam consonants are organised into seven groups based on where and how the sound is produced in the mouth — a classification system inherited from Sanskrit phonology that is thousands of years old. Understanding these groups makes memorisation far easier, because sounds within the same group feel similar in the mouth.
| Letter | Transliteration | Sound Description | Example | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ക | ka | As in “skip” | കടൽ | Sea |
| ഖ | kha | Aspirated K (breathier) | ഖനി | Mine |
| ഗ | ga | As in “go” | ഗണപതി | Ganesha |
| ഘ | gha | Aspirated G | ഘടം | Pot |
| ങ | nga | “ng” as in “sing” — nasal | ങ | Rare standalone |
| ച | cha | As in “chair” | ചന്ദ്രൻ | Moon |
| ഛ | chha | Aspirated CH | ഛത്രം | Umbrella (Sanskrit) |
| ജ | ja | As in “jump” | ജലം | Water |
| ഞ | nya | “ny” as in “canyon” | ഞാൻ | I / me |
| ട | ṭa | Retroflex T — tongue curls back | ടമ്പ | Drum |
| ണ | ṇa | Retroflex N | കണ്ണ് | Eye |
| ത | tha | Dental T (softer than English T) | തിരുവനന്തപുരം | Thiruvananthapuram |
| ദ | dha | Dental D | ദൈവം | God |
| ന | na | As in “name” | നദി | River |
| പ | pa | As in “spot” | പൂ | Flower |
| മ | ma | As in “mother” | മലയാളം | Malayalam |
| യ | ya | As in “yes” | യാത്ര | Journey |
| ര | ra | Flapped R (softer) | രാജൻ | King |
| ല | la | As in “love” | ലോകം | World |
| വ | va | As in “van” | വീട് | House |
| ശ | sha | Palatal SH | ശബ്ദം | Sound |
| ഷ | ṣha | Retroflex SH | ഷഡ് | Six (Sanskrit) |
| സ | sa | As in “sun” | സ്നേഹം | Love |
| ഹ | ha | As in “hello” | ഹൃദയം | Heart |
These three letters are the ones that make Malayalam distinctly Malayalam. They do not exist in most other Indian languages — not in Hindi, not in Bengali, and only partially in Tamil and Kannada. Mastering them is a rite of passage for any learner, and getting them right is what separates a halting beginner from someone who sounds genuinely Keralite.
ള (ḷa) — Retroflex L: Produced with the tongue curled back to touch the roof of the mouth, then released. It sounds like a deeper, fuller “L” than the English one. Essential word: ആള് (aal) — person.
ഴ (zha) — The Unique Malayalam Sound: This sound does not exist in any other major language. It is produced by curling the tongue back and producing a sound between “L” and “zh” (as in “measure”). It features in some of the most beautiful Malayalam words: കേരളം (Kerala), മഴ (mazha) — rain, ഴ is in all of them. If you master this one sound, native speakers will be genuinely impressed.
റ (ṟa) — The Hard R: A strong, trilled R — much harder than the soft ര (ra). Essential for accurate Malayalam. Example: അറ (ara) — room; മറ (mara) — screen. Confusing ര and റ changes the meaning of words entirely.
A chillu letter (chillaksharam) is a consonant that carries absolutely no vowel sound — not even the default “a” sound that regular consonants carry. They almost always appear at the end of words, giving the word a clean, vowel-free closing sound.
| Chillu | Sound | Example Word | Meaning | Where It Appears |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ൺ | Pure ṇ (no vowel) | കൺ | Eye | End of words |
| ൻ | Pure n (no vowel) | അവൻ | He | Very common word ending |
| ർ | Pure r (no vowel) | കാർ | Car / cloud | Very common word ending |
| ൽ | Pure l (no vowel) | ഫുൾ | Full | Word endings |
| ൾ | Pure ḷ (retroflex, no vowel) | ആൾ | Person | Very common word ending |
When two consonants appear together without a vowel between them, they form a conjunct (kootaksharangal). In traditional Malayalam script, these were written as single merged characters — which is why traditional Malayalam had 900+ characters. In the reformed script, they are written more separately but still affect pronunciation. Here are the 20 most common conjuncts every learner should recognise.
| Conjunct | Components | Transliteration | Example Word | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ക്ക | ക് + ക | kka | അക്ക | Elder sister |
| ന്ന | ന് + ന | nna | കണ്ണ് | Eye |
| ല്ല | ല് + ല | lla | അല്ല | No / not |
| മ്മ | മ് + മ | mma | അമ്മ | Mother |
| ട്ട | ട് + ട | ṭṭa | കട്ടൻ | Strong (coffee) |
| ത്ത | ത് + ത | ttha | ഒത്ത | Matched / together |
| ണ്ണ | ണ് + ണ | ṇṇa | കണ്ണ് | Eye |
| ന്ത | ന് + ത | ntha | സന്തോഷം | Happiness |
| ങ്ക | ങ് + ക | ngka | ബാങ്ക് | Bank |
| ഞ്ഞ | ഞ് + ഞ | njnja | ഒഞ്ഞി | A name / boat |
| ക്ഷ | ക് + ഷ | ksha | അക്ഷരം | Letter / syllable |
| സ്ക | സ് + ക | ska | സ്കൂൾ | School |
| ന്റ | ൻ + റ | nṟa | എന്റ | My (spoken form) |
| പ്ര | പ് + ര | pra | പ്രിയം | Love / dear |
| ത്ര | ത് + ര | thra | ത്രിശൂർ | Thrissur |
| ഗ്ര | ഗ് + ര | gra | ഗ്രാമം | Village |
| ബ്ര | ബ് + ര | bra | ബ്രഹ്മം | Brahman (divine) |
| ദ്ധ | ദ് + ധ | ddha | ബുദ്ധൻ | Buddha |
| ജ്ഞ | ജ് + ഞ | jnya | ജ്ഞാനം | Knowledge |
| ശ്ര | ശ് + ര | shra | ശ്രദ്ധ | Attention |
For learners who already know Tamil or Kannada, or for heritage speakers whose families use multiple South Indian languages, here is how the scripts compare. This context makes Malayalam letters much easier to situate mentally.
| Feature | Malayalam | Tamil | Kannada |
|---|---|---|---|
| Script family | Grantha-derived | Brahmi-derived (distinct) | Kadamba/Grantha-derived |
| Letter count | 53–56 | ~247 (with combinations) | ~52 base letters |
| Visual style | Round, curved, flowing loops | Angular-round mix | Similar curves to Malayalam |
| Shared sounds | Most consonants shared with Tamil | No ഴ (zha unique to each) | Most consonants shared |
| Unique letters | ഴ, ള, റ (unique forms) | ழ, ள, ற (different shapes) | ಳ, ೞ (less common) |
| Sanskrit integration | Very high — all Sanskrit letters present | Lower — separate Grantha set | High — full Sanskrit support |
Note: If you already read Tamil, you will find Malayalam consonant groups familiar in sound — but the shapes are quite different. Kannada and Malayalam are visually more similar to each other than either is to Tamil. Many Kannada letters share obvious visual ancestry with their Malayalam counterparts.
Malayalam letters are written following a general top-to-bottom, left-to-right stroke order. The characteristic feature of Malayalam handwriting is the circular base stroke — most letters begin with a rounded loop, which is why the script looks so curved compared to, say, Hindi or Kannada.
1. Start with the base circle/curve. Most Malayalam letters have a looping foundation. Draw this first.
2. Add the vertical or horizontal stroke. This distinguishes similar-looking letters (e.g., ക vs ഗ vs ഖ).
3. Add diacritics last. Vowel signs, anuswara dots, and viramas are always added after the base letter is formed.
4. Leave equal spacing between letters. Unlike English, Malayalam letters do not sit on a baseline — they hang from an invisible top line in printed form, but in handwriting, keep spacing even.
Best practice for NRI children: Use 4-line notebooks (like the ones used in Kerala schools) to practise. The four lines help maintain consistent letter height and placement — crucial for developing good Malayalam handwriting.
This plan is designed for complete beginners — adults, children, and NRI families learning together. Fifteen minutes a day, consistently applied, will give you confident letter recognition in a week.
The fastest way to cement vowel learning is to associate each vowel with a real, meaningful word. Here are practice words that every Malayalam speaker knows — perfect for NRI children and adult learners alike.
The script is the foundation — and having a teacher guide your pronunciation from day one means you build correct habits, not incorrect ones that need unlearning later. Decode Malayalam’s structured beginner courses are designed specifically for NRI families and adult learners starting from scratch.
🎓 Book Your Free Demo Class Today →The standard modern Malayalam alphabet has 13 vowels and 36 consonants, plus 5 chillu letters (pure consonant forms), totalling 53–56 characters depending on whether you count special modifiers. Some textbooks say 54, others 56 — the variation comes from whether chillu letters and the Sanskrit-specific anuswara/visarga are included in the count.
The script looks complex, but it is fully phonetic — every letter represents exactly one sound, with no exceptions. For complete beginners, the script typically takes 2–4 weeks of daily practice to read confidently. The harder part for most learners is pronunciation — particularly the three unique letters ള, ഴ, and റ. With structured instruction and audio guidance, most adult learners achieve basic reading fluency within a month.
അക്ഷരമാല (Aksharamala) literally means “garland of letters” — akshara = letter/syllable, maala = garland. It is the Malayalam term for the complete alphabet. In Kerala schools, children learn the Aksharamala through chanting — a melodic recitation of all vowels and consonants in order, which is still the primary method of alphabet instruction today.
ര (ra) is a soft, flapped R — similar to the R in Spanish “pero.” റ (ṟa) is a hard, tapped or trilled R — produced with a stronger, more forceful tongue movement. They are completely different sounds and different letters. Confusing them changes the meaning of words: ഇര (ira) means “prey” while ഇറ (iṟa) means “come down.” Both letters are extremely common in everyday Malayalam.
Traditional Malayalam script had over 900 unique characters because every combination of consonants was written as a single merged symbol (conjunct). The 1971 script reform simplified this by breaking conjuncts into their component parts, reducing the effective character set to around 53–60 base forms. However, many traditional fonts and classical texts still use the full set of conjunct characters, which is why you may see very different-looking Malayalam in old books compared to modern digital text.
With 15 minutes of daily practice, most beginners can recognise all basic vowels and consonants in 7–14 days. Reading simple words confidently takes about 3–4 weeks. Reading full sentences smoothly typically takes 1–3 months depending on how consistently you practice. The key is daily exposure — even 10 minutes of reading practice each day compounds rapidly.
The ഴ (zha) sound is one of the most distinctive sounds in any language — and it is uniquely associated with Malayalam (and to some extent Tamil). It is a retroflex lateral approximant: the tongue curls back and produces a sound between “L” and “zh” (like the “s” in “measure”). It appears in the very word Kerala (കേരളം) — the “ḷ” sound in Kerala is a related retroflex sound. The best way to learn it is to hear a native speaker say words like mazha (rain) and kazha (to pass) repeatedly, then imitate.
For modern learners, start with the reformed script (1971 version) — it is what you will see in 95% of newspapers, textbooks, websites, and digital content in Kerala today. The traditional script is worth learning later if you want to read classical literature, old religious texts, or traditional calligraphy. Many Decode Malayalam learners find that once they are confident with the reformed script, recognising traditional forms comes naturally.
The script is your key that opens everything else. Once you can read Malayalam letters, every vocabulary guide, every song lyric, every recipe card, and every family message becomes accessible. Here is where to go next:
Last updated: March 2026 | Source: Decode Malayalam | Author: Decode Malayalam Team
| Alphabets | Word | English Meaning | Image |
|---|---|---|---|
| അ [a] | അമ്മ (amma) | Mother |
|
| ആ [aa] | ആന (aana) | Elephant |
|
| ഇ [i] | ഇല (ila) | Leaf |
|
| ഈ [ee] | ഈച്ച (eecha) | House Fly |
|
| ഉ [u] | ഉറുമ്പ് (urumb) | Ant |
|
| ഊ [oo] | ഊഞ്ഞാൽ (oonjal) | Swing |
|
| ഋ [ru] | ഋഷി (rishi) | Sage |
|
| എ [e] | എലി (eli) | Rat |
|
| ഏ [ea] | ഏണി (eani) | Ladder |
|
| ഐ (ai) | ഐതീഹ്യം (aitheehyam) | Myth |
|
| ഒ [o] | ഒട്ടകം (ottakam) | Camel |
|
| ഓ [oo] | ഓടി (oodi) | Run |
|
| ഔ [au] | ഔഷധം (aushadham) | Medicine |
|
| അം [am] | അംഗരക്ഷകൻ (amgarakshakan) | Body Guard |
|
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