SutonnyMJ to Unicode Converter (সুতন্বীএমজে ⇄ ইউনিকোড)
Convert SutonnyMJ and Bijoy 52 (ANSI) Bangla text to clean Unicode instantly. Free, accurate, and private — runs entirely in your browser with no install.
🔒 100% private — conversion runs entirely in your browser. Nothing is uploaded or stored.
What is a SutonnyMJ to Unicode converter?
A SutonnyMJ to Unicode converter turns Bangla typed in the SutonnyMJ (ANSI) font into modern Unicode that works everywhere — websites, Microsoft Word, Google Docs, Facebook, and mobile — with no special font installed. SutonnyMJ is the most widely used Bijoy ANSI font, so this is exactly the same as a Bijoy to Unicode conversion. It rebuilds conjuncts (যুক্তাক্ষর) and reorders vowel signs into correct Unicode order, runs entirely in your browser, and is free and private.
How to convert SutonnyMJ to Unicode
- Paste SutonnyMJ text. Copy the ANSI Bangla and paste it into the left box.
- Get Unicode instantly. The Unicode result appears on the right automatically.
- Copy or Download PDF. Use the converted Unicode anywhere — it displays without any special font.
SutonnyMJ to Unicode: a real example
The same Bangla sentence — a line from the national anthem — converted from SutonnyMJ (ANSI) to Unicode with this tool:
| Encoding | The text |
|---|---|
| SutonnyMJ (Bijoy / ANSI) input | Avgvi †mvbvi evsjv‡`k |
| Unicode output | আমার সোনার বাংলাদেশ |
Notice the SutonnyMJ input looks like random Latin letters when no SutonnyMJ font is applied — that is how ANSI text behaves. After conversion, the Unicode output reads as proper Bangla on any device, in any app, with no font to install.
SutonnyMJ vs Unicode: what’s the difference?
| SutonnyMJ (ANSI) | Unicode | |
|---|---|---|
| Needs a specific font | Yes — SutonnyMJ | No |
| Shows on web & mobile | No (boxes / Latin letters) | Yes, everywhere |
| Works on Facebook / Google | No | Yes |
| Searchable & copy-paste safe | No | Yes |
| Best for | Legacy print & DTP layout | Web, apps, documents, sharing |
Read the full explainer: Bijoy vs Unicode.
SutonnyMJ, ANSI & Unicode — what’s the link?
SutonnyMJ stores Bangla as ANSI codes mapped onto English byte positions, so the text only displays correctly with that exact font installed. Unicode gives each Bangla character its own universal code point, so it renders everywhere without a special font. That is why pasting SutonnyMJ text into Facebook or a website shows gibberish until you convert it. See also what SutonnyMJ is and the best Bangla Unicode fonts.
Who needs SutonnyMJ → Unicode?
- Students & writers moving old SutonnyMJ documents to Word, Google Docs, or the web.
- Journalists & editors pulling archive text out of legacy newspaper layouts.
- Offices & govt staff migrating old ANSI files to searchable Unicode.
- Anyone who needs SutonnyMJ text to show correctly on Facebook, mobile, or a website.
Troubleshooting: SutonnyMJ text shows boxes or English letters
If your SutonnyMJ text appears as □□□ boxes or random Latin characters, that is the ANSI encoding showing through — the device simply doesn’t have the SutonnyMJ font. Converting it to Unicode here fixes that permanently, because Unicode needs no special font. Still seeing boxes after converting? See how to fix Bangla font boxes.
Frequently asked questions
Is SutonnyMJ to Unicode the same as Bijoy to Unicode?
Yes. SutonnyMJ is the standard Bijoy ANSI font, so converting SutonnyMJ text to Unicode is exactly the same conversion.
What is ANSI Bangla?
ANSI Bangla is the legacy encoding where Bangla glyphs are mapped onto English byte positions; SutonnyMJ and Bijoy 52 are common ANSI fonts. Unicode replaces this with a universal standard.
Does it handle Bijoy 52 text too?
Yes — Bijoy 52 uses the same ANSI layout as SutonnyMJ, so it converts the same way.
Is it free and private?
Yes. Free, no install, and 100% in-browser — your text is never uploaded or stored.
Do I need the SutonnyMJ font installed to convert?
No. The converter reads the underlying ANSI text, not the font, so it works even if SutonnyMJ is not installed. You only needed SutonnyMJ to view the original text correctly.
My SutonnyMJ text shows as boxes or English letters — why?
That means the device lacks the SutonnyMJ font, so the ANSI codes show through as Latin letters or boxes. Convert the text to Unicode here and it will display correctly everywhere without any font.
Will the Unicode output work on Facebook, Word and websites?
Yes. The result is standard Unicode Bangla, which displays correctly on Facebook, Microsoft Word, Google Docs, websites, and mobile — no special font required.