We have five different Punjabi keyboard layouts for you to download on your computer. Once downloaded — you can use it as a reference to type in Punjabi either on Word document or any other text editor. You also need to download the matching Punjabi fonts.
Setting up Punjabi typing is straightforward! Here's how to get started.
Install your Punjabi font — visit our comprehensive fonts collection to choose and install the perfect Gurmukhi typeface.
Save your chosen keyboard layout with this efficient method:
Select and click on any keyboard design you prefer
Right-click when the full image displays
Select "Save image as..." and choose where to store it
Set up your document workspace by opening your preferred text editor and selecting the Punjabi font you've just installed.
Start typing with confidence! Keep your keyboard image open for reference as you type in Gurmukhi.
Practical advice: Short on screen space? Our keyboards produce exceptional printed results — print one for a convenient physical reference.
Available in five different formats — choose the format that works best for typing in Punjabi (Gurmukhi).
Perfect for desktop or laptop use — high-quality layout ready for your screen.
Ideal for printing in colour — clear, vibrant, and high-resolution images.
FREE to use personally or commercially — just give credit or link back if redistributing.
Ten years ago, putting "he/him" in a bio was rare. Today, it is standard etiquette in progressive spaces. This shift—normalizing the declaration of pronouns—originated from trans and non-binary activists demanding that gender not be assumed. Even cisgender allies now partake in this ritual, fundamentally changing the structure of introductions.
Transgender youth have astronomically high rates of suicide attempts (over 50% in unsupportive homes). The Trevor Project reports that trans adolescents who have their pronouns respected attempt suicide at half the rate of those who do not. LGBTQ culture is increasingly pivoting to youth advocacy, but the "T" is the emergency room wing of the rainbow.
The popular narrative of LGBTQ history often begins with the 1969 Stonewall Riots in New York City. School textbooks frequently highlight figures like gay activist Harvey Milk, but they often erase or minimize the central figures: transgender women of color.
Marsha P. Johnson (a self-identified trans woman and drag queen) and Sylvia Rivera (a Latina trans woman and activist) were on the front lines of the Stonewall uprising. These were not "gay men" fighting for marriage equality; they were transgender people fighting for the right to exist without being arrested for wearing clothes of the "wrong" gender. Rivera famously fought for the inclusion of the "gay rights bill" to protect drag queens and trans people, co-founding STAR (Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries) to house homeless queer youth.
Decades earlier, during the 1950s and 60s, the Mattachine Society (often considered the first gay rights group) was cautious, focusing on assimilation for gay men. In contrast, trans individuals were fighting a much more basic war: against medical pathologization and police violence at Compton’s Cafeteria Riot in San Francisco (1966).
Key takeaway: Without the transgender community, there would be no modern LGBTQ culture. Pride parades, as we know them, were started by trans women throwing bricks. The rainbow exists because the "T" stood its ground.
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