Desi Story In Gujarati Font
Desi Story In Gujarati Font >>> https://urlgoal.com/2t7Utu
Indian food has amassed a huge fan following across the world. Foreigners and people living abroad are getting interested in knowing more about the culinary delights that the country has to offer. We desi people can't help but feel a sense of pride when foreigners try the cuisines from our country. However, one American blogger has taken this a step further! YouTuber Arieh Smith, who goes by the name @xiaomanyc on the video-sharing application has posted a video where he interacted with Gujarati restaurant owners. He spoke to them in Gujarati and the desi restaurateurs were left seriously impressed. In fact, some of them even gave him food for free!Watch the full video shared by the American blogger here:The 7-minute-long video has gone viral on YouTube, garnering over 1.1 million views since the time it was posted. In the clip, the blogger said that he had a Gujarati friend in America who helped him learn the language. He realised that many Indian-Americans were also from Gujarat and thus, he decided to converse in Gujarati with them to surprise them. He ordered food and spoke to the restaurant owners in Gujarati, leaving them surprised and stunned. He also sampled the Gujarati Thali with Rotla, vegetables and more. Shrikhand and Masala Chaas were next on his radar, followed by the classic Gujarati Paan.window._rrCode = window._rrCode || [];_rrCode.push(function(){ (function(v,d,o,ai){ai=d.createElement("script");ai.defer=true;ai.async=true;ai.src=v.location.protocol+o;d.head.appendChild(ai);})(window, document, "//a.vdo.ai/core/v-ndtv/vdo.ai.js"); });Some restaurateurs were so pleased with the American blogger's Gujarati that they did not charge him for the food at all! "People were totally surprised, and then they gave me free food. Speaking of free food, I also tried a lot of great Gujarati food like paan, masala chaas, bajra no rotlo, and of course Gujarati thali. Yum," he wrote in the description of the video.(Also Read: Vietnamese Food Blogger Reacts On Having South Indian Food For The First Time)A typical Gujarati thali with myriad foods.YouTube users poured in their appreciation for the American blogger and his Gujarati speaking skills. "People are touched by your genuine kindness and the respect you show by speaking their native language. What an amazing gift," wrote one user. Another appreciated, "Wow Gujarati is my native tongue, and you did so well after little practice!" Yet another user wrote, "Xiaoma is literally devouring languages. When he starts learning a language, next thing he does is going to restaurants in order to "eat the language"."In November 2021, the same blogger had also ordered Bengali food such as Puchka and Roshagulla while conversing in Bengali. The video garnered much appreciation from desi YouTube users.Click here to read the full story. Comments About Aditi AhujaAditi loves talking to and meeting like-minded foodies (especially the kind who like veg momos). Plus points if you get her bad jokes and sitcom references, or if you recommend a new place to eat at.
So how do you choose the best Google Font for your project? First, you'll need to check if it's suitable for the design elements you're using. Some fonts, for example, suit normal-sized body text but not large headlines, and vice-versa. You'll also want to know that the font family contains all the features you need. For example, is the font available in a sufficient range of weights and styles? Do you require multiple language support, numbers, fractions, etc.?
You'll also need to consider legibility: it's worth, for example, comparing the O and 0, l and 1, to see how distinguishable they are. And if you need lots of design flexibility, are there multiple widths and optical sizes (different versions of a typeface intended to be used at different sizes), or is the typeface available as a variable font?
Led by Swedish software designer Rasmus Andersson, Inter is a variable font designed for computer screens, featuring a tall x-height to aid in the readability of mixed-case and lower-case text. It also includes several OpenType features, including tabular numbers, contextual alternates that adjust punctuation depending on the shape of surrounding glyphs, and a slashed zero for when you need to disambiguate zero from the letter O.
Eczar is designed to bring liveliness and vigour to multi-script typesetting in Latin and Devanagari. Providing a strong mix of personality and performance, both at text sizes and in display settings, this font family offers a wide expressive range. The display qualities of the design intensify with a corresponding increase in weight, making the heaviest weights best suited for headlines and display purposes.
In 2018, Mikhail Sharanda designed Manrope, an open-source modern sans-serif font family. A crossover of different font types, it's semi-condensed, semi-rounded, semi-geometric, semi-din and semi-grotesque. It employs minimal stoke thickness variations and a semi-closed aperture. In 2019, Mikhail collaborated with Mirko Velimirovic to convert it into a variable font.
Released by ParaType in 2010, PT Serif is a pan-Cyrillic font family. A transitional serif typeface with humanistic terminals, it's designed for use together with PT Sans and is harmonised across metrics, proportions, weights and design. Regular and bold weights with corresponding italics form a standard font family for body text. Meanwhile, two caption styles in regular and italic are for use in small point sizes.
Cardo is a large Unicode font specifically designed for the needs of classicists, Biblical scholars, medievalists, and linguists. It also works well for general typesetting in projects seeking an 'old-world' look. Its large character set supports many modern languages, as well as those required by scholars. The font set includes ligatures, old-style numerals, true small capitals and a variety of punctuation and space characters.
A contemporary font with roots in calligraphy, Lora is well suited for use in body text. Characterised by moderate contrast, brushed curves and driving serifs, it effortlessly conveys the mood of a modern-day story or art essay. Optimised for screens, it also works well in print, and it has been updated to a variable font since 2019.
Inspired by the lettering of John Baskerville and 'Scotch Roman' designs of the late 18th century, Playfair is a transitional display font with high contrast and delicate hairlines. Suitable for use in large sizes, it works well accompanied by Georgia for body text.
Cormorant is a serif, display type family inspired by the 16th-century designs of Claude Garamont. It comprises a total of 45 font files spanning nine different visual styles and five weights. Cormorant is the standard version, Cormorant Garamond features larger counters, Cormorant Infant features a single-story a and g, Cormorant Unicase mixes lowercase and uppercase forms, and Cormorant Upright is an italic design. 2b1af7f3a8