
When teams need Sindhi translation
- Organizations serving Pakistan’s Sindh province need Arabic-script Sindhi content for government, education, or media programs.
- Indian government or NGO programs targeting Sindhi-speaking communities in Gujarat, Rajasthan, or Maharashtra require Devanagari-script Sindhi materials.
- AI data teams building multilingual datasets need Sindhi audio, text, or annotation from speakers who can distinguish between regional dialects and both script traditions.
- Publishers or media platforms serving Sindhi diaspora audiences worldwide need content that handles the Arabic-Devanagari script divide correctly.
Sindhi services we deliver
Linguists sourced from Sindh province in Pakistan (Hyderabad, Karachi) and Indian Sindhi communities in Gujarat, Rajasthan, and Mumbai. University of Sindh (Jamshoro) alumni and Sindhi literary organizations provide professional pipeline.
Script note: Sindhi uses an Arabic-derived script with 52 letters — one of the largest Arabic-script alphabets in use. The script is written right-to-left and includes unique characters for implosive consonants found only in Sindhi. Indian Sindhi is increasingly written in Devanagari. MoniSa delivers in both scripts, confirmed during scoping. The historical Khudabadi script is handled on a consultative basis for archival projects.
Dialect note: Coverage spans Standard Sindhi (Hyderabad), Vicholi Sindhi, Lari Sindhi, and Indian Sindhi (Devanagari). Dialect and script are matched to the target audience during project scoping.
Sindhi translation workflow

step 1
Scope and match
step 2
Execute and review
Translators deliver in the confirmed script with RTL rendering checks for Arabic-script output. Editors verify implosive consonant characters and dialect-specific vocabulary. For bilingual projects, cross-script consistency is reviewed at the terminology level.
step 3
Deliver and report
Final deliverables include script-validated files, a quality scorecard, and a dialect-alignment report. For dual-script projects, a cross-script consistency summary is included.
Sindhi at a glance
Sindhi is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by approximately 30 million people, primarily in Pakistan’s Sindh province and among the Sindhi diaspora in India. It holds official language status in both countries. The language carries a rich Sufi literary tradition dating back to Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai’s 18th-century poetry. Sindhi’s Arabic-derived script uses 52 letters, including dedicated characters for four implosive consonants absent in neighboring languages. The India-Pakistan partition created a lasting digraphia: the same spoken language now requires two different scripts depending on the country of publication.
Quality control
All Sindhi work follows MoniSa’s 3-layer review model: translator (domain-matched, with script-specific proficiency and implosive consonant accuracy verified before assignment), editor (bilingual accuracy and terminology adherence), proofreader or community validator (cultural and contextual review). Resource scarcity does not reduce quality requirements.
Proven delivery
257,000 words delivered across 8 rare languages spanning 4 scripts in 10 days at 99.8% accuracy. Sindhi operates in both Arabic-Nastaliq (Pakistan) and Devanagari (India) scripts, presenting the same multi-script challenge as the rare languages in that project. The dual-script rendering validation and interference screening from that engagement are standard procedure on all Sindhi programs. The same linguist vetting, rolling batch delivery, and script-specific QA framework from that engagement are the standard operating procedures for all Sindhi work.
Buyer risk controls
Linguist replacement SLA
Vetted Network status means replacement Sindhi linguists can be sourced within 5-7 business days through pre-qualified community channels. The sourcing depth in this language provides backup capacity that minimizes single-point-of-failure risk.
Quality parity guarantee
The same MQM error categories, scoring thresholds, and review stages apply to rare-language work as to any high-resource delivery.
Transparent sourcing status
Availability status is communicated during scoping, not discovered during production. If sourcing is needed, the timeline is part of the project plan from day one.
Governance and security
Certified: ISO 9001:2015, ISO 27001:2013, ISO 17100:2015.
Memberships: Member of GALA, ATC, EUATC, Elia, and CITLoB — international language industry associations.
Security: GDPR-compliant. NDAs standard. Encrypted transit and storage.
Data handling:Cross-border Sindhi projects (Pakistan/India) follow data residency protocols confirmed at scoping.
Frequently asked questions
How do you source Sindhi translators?
Sindhi is written in two scripts depending on country context. In Pakistan, the standard is Arabic-derived with 52 letters. In India, Devanagari is increasingly used. MoniSa delivers in both. The script is confirmed at scoping based on target audience and geography.
What makes Sindhi's Arabic script different from Urdu or Arabic?
Sindhi’s 52-letter Arabic-derived alphabet is significantly larger than standard Arabic (28 letters) or Urdu (39 letters). The additional characters represent implosive consonants and other phonemes unique to Sindhi. These characters do not exist in Urdu or Arabic fonts, which is why Urdu-trained translators frequently produce incorrect Sindhi output. MoniSa assigns only native Sindhi speakers with verified script proficiency.
What quality standards apply to Sindhi projects?
Every Sindhi project receives the same 3-layer QA applied to all MoniSa languages: domain-matched translator, bilingual editor, and community or cultural validator. For dual-script projects, cross-script terminology consistency is an additional review checkpoint.
What Sindhi dialects does MoniSa cover?
Four variants are supported: Standard Sindhi (Hyderabad), Vicholi, Lari, and Indian Sindhi (Devanagari). Dialect selection is confirmed during scoping. For projects targeting multiple dialects, separate linguists are assigned per variant to maintain accuracy.
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