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Assamese Text to PDF

Paste any Assamese (অসমীয়া) or English text and download a clean PDF file in seconds. Choose A4 or Letter, portrait or landscape, font size, margins and alignment. Live preview updates as you type. 100% private — your text never leaves your browser.

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Convert Assamese Text to PDF — Free, Online, No Signup

This is a free online Assamese to PDF converter that runs entirely inside your browser. Paste any অসমীয়া (Axomiya) or English text, pick your page size and margins, and download a clean, printable PDF in a few seconds. The tool was built specifically for the Assamese script — every conjunct (ক্ষ, জ্ঞ, ত্ৰ), vowel sign and the Assamese danda renders the way it should, without the font-breaking problems people often run into when using generic English-only PDF makers.

If you still need to type your text first, you can use our English to Assamese typing tool to convert phonetic English into অসমীয়া Unicode, then paste it straight in here. Already have a draft? Paste it from Microsoft Word, Google Docs, Notepad, a .txt file, a DOCX, a WhatsApp message — anywhere Unicode Assamese text lives.

How the Assamese Font to PDF Converter Helps You

If you've ever tried to write Assamese online and download a PDF using a generic word processor or a random "text to PDF" site, you already know the usual headaches — the font swaps to something that doesn't support অসমীয়া, the conjuncts collapse into squares, the matras drift away from the consonants, or the file looks fine on your machine and totally wrong on the recipient's. This converter exists to take that whole problem off your plate.

It loads a proper Unicode Bengali / Assamese font (U+0980 – U+09FF), lets you compose or paste your text right in the browser with a live PDF-shaped preview, and then captures that exact rendering into a downloadable file. So whether you're a student writing a class assignment, a teacher preparing a handout, a journalist drafting a piece, or someone simply wanting to send a clean অসমীয়া note to a friend, you get a few practical benefits in one place:

In other words, it lets you skip the "will my Assamese font survive this export?" anxiety and just produce a clean, shareable document. If you don't have the text typed up yet, start with our English-to-Assamese typing tool, then drop the result straight into this page to finish it as a PDF.

What Kind of Input Works?

The converter accepts Unicode Assamese text. That covers the vast majority of modern sources — anything you copy from a website, a Google Doc, a recent Microsoft Word document, Notepad on Windows, a chat app, an email or any phone keyboard that types অসমীয়া directly. Phonetic typing tools like Lipikaar, Avro, Google Indic Keyboard and Gboard all produce Unicode output by default, so their text drops in cleanly.

One honest caveat about legacy fonts. Older Assamese typing systems such as Ramdhenu, Geetanjali, Bijoy or other ASCII-mapped fonts were popular before Unicode became standard. Text typed in those systems is not real Unicode — it's English letters that happen to look Assamese only when the matching font is installed. If you paste that kind of text here you'll see English-looking characters instead of অসমীয়া. You'll need to run it through a legacy-to-Unicode converter first; once converted, the result pastes in perfectly and downloads as a proper PDF.

About the Downloaded PDF

The Download PDF button produces an image-based PDF. The Assamese text looks sharp on every device — phone, tablet, laptop, printer — because it is captured exactly as your browser drew it. The trade-off is that the text inside the file is a high-resolution image, so it cannot be selected or copied later. For the things most people actually do with these PDFs — handouts, lesson notes, assignment submissions, share-sheets, WhatsApp forwards, prints — an image-based file is what you want, since it removes any chance of the recipient's device missing the font and showing boxes instead of letters.

Each page automatically includes a small footer with the page number and the assamesekeyboard.com link. Long text is split across multiple pages for you; you don't need to break it manually.

Works on Mobile and Desktop

There's nothing to install — no Android app, no Windows software, no Chrome extension. The converter is a web page, so it works on any phone, tablet or computer with a modern browser (Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Safari, Brave, Samsung Internet, all current versions). On a phone, the layout stacks so you can paste, preview and download with one thumb. On a desktop, the live preview sits beside the input so you can watch page breaks shift as you change the font size or margins.

A Typical Workflow

Tips for a Better-Looking PDF

Privacy — Your Text Never Leaves Your Browser

This is a 100% browser-based tool. Whatever you type or paste stays on your own device — nothing is uploaded, stored or shared. The PDF is built right inside your browser, so even sensitive drafts like personal letters, legal notes or confidential reports never touch our servers.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does Assamese font sometimes break when I convert to PDF in other tools?

Most general-purpose PDF makers were built for English. When they hit a complex script like Assamese they either pick a font that doesn't contain the conjuncts and matras (so you get empty boxes or wrong characters) or they convert the text to a generic system font that mangles the spacing. This tool sidesteps the whole problem by rendering the page in your browser with a proper Unicode Bengali / Assamese font first, then capturing that exact rendering as the PDF. What you see on screen is byte-for-byte what ends up in the file.

How do I convert Assamese text to PDF on a mobile phone?

The same way as on a desktop — just open this page in your phone's browser, paste your text, and tap Download PDF. The file saves to your phone's Downloads folder. No app install needed, works on Android and iOS, and the rendering quality is identical to the desktop version.

Can I paste Assamese text copied from Microsoft Word or a DOCX file?

Yes — as long as the Word document used a Unicode font (Nirmala UI, Vrinda, any modern OS-provided Bengali font, or Google Docs' built-in fonts). Copy the text from Word and paste it directly into the input box. If the document used a legacy ASCII font (e.g. Ramdhenu, Geetanjali, Bijoy) you'll need to convert it to Unicode first; see the "What Kind of Input Works?" section above.

Will my text be uploaded to a server?

No. Everything runs locally in your browser using JavaScript. The text you paste is never sent to our server or anyone else's — you can verify this by opening your browser's network tab while you download. Once the page is loaded, the conversion happens 100% offline.

Does the converter work offline?

Usually yes, after the first visit. The PDF libraries and the Noto Sans Bengali font are cached by your browser on first load, so subsequent visits typically keep working without an internet connection. Behaviour depends on your browser's cache settings — clearing site data or using a strict private-mode setup will force a fresh download.

Why is the text in the downloaded PDF not selectable?

The tool produces an image-based PDF. This is a deliberate choice that guarantees perfect Assamese rendering on every device, because the recipient's machine doesn't need to have an Assamese-capable font installed — it just opens a picture. The downside is the text inside is technically a raster image and can't be copy-pasted out of the file.

Is there a maximum text length?

There's no hard limit. Rendering scales linearly with text length — articles, essays, exam answers and short stories convert instantly. Tens of thousands of words may take several seconds because the browser has to draw a large canvas in memory. If you have a very long document, give the page a moment after clicking Download before clicking again.

What page sizes, margins and font sizes are supported?

A4 (210 × 297 mm) and US Letter (216 × 279 mm), both portrait and landscape. Margins are narrow (12 mm), normal (20 mm) or wide (28 mm). Font size is adjustable from 11 to 20 points. Text alignment can be left or justified. Line spacing is configurable. That covers almost every classroom, office and personal use case.

Can I convert a plain .txt file or copy-paste from Notepad?

Yes. Open the .txt file (or Notepad window), select all text, copy and paste it into the input box here. As long as the file was saved as UTF-8 (the modern default), the Assamese characters will appear correctly in the preview and the PDF.

Will the PDF look the same on phones and computers?

Yes. The PDF is generated at full paper proportions regardless of which device made it, so the file is identical whether you created it on a phone or a laptop. The on-screen preview is scaled down to fit your screen — but the underlying PDF is always full size.

Does it work for Bengali (Bangla) text as well?

Yes. Assamese and Bengali share the same Unicode block (U+0980–U+09FF) and Noto Sans Bengali covers both. The tool treats them the same — paste Bengali text and download a Bengali PDF the same way.

Can I add images to the PDF?

Not in this version. The tool is intentionally a focused text-to-PDF converter for clean Assamese typography. Image embedding would need a different workflow and isn't on the immediate roadmap.

Is the Assamese language officially supported in Unicode?

Yes. The Assamese script is part of the Bengali Unicode block and Assamese-specific characters such as (ra) and (wa) have their own dedicated code points. You can read more about the Assamese language and its script on Wikipedia.

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