The general public will be encouraged to use this strategy in public applications as well. The tamil Rule language Act was enacted in 1956 to declare tamil the official language of the government of tamil Nadu, according to the director of tamil Development in his letter dated 16.09.2021. As a key purpose of the tamil Rule Act, an order was issued and is in effect in the first reading, requiring all government officials and employees in government offices to sign in Tamil. 

Following this, the Third Reading Ordinance issued an order requiring government officials and employees to only write their initials (Initials) (Father, Mother, Home) in tamil before mentioning their names. When announcements, notices, auction advertisements, and other advertisements are made in the second letter of the government, the prefix affixed to the names of the officers is written in tamil script (S. Muthu). Apart from that, while signing by government employees, the government has advised them to use the correct tamil prefix (Su. Muthu) and to sign the correct tamil alphabet before the name. Consequently, despite the fact that different government entities demand signatures and handwriting to be written in tamil, even government officials do not write their handwriting entirely in Tamil.

As a result, everyone from the Chief Minister, Ministers, Members of Parliament, Legislators, senior officials, and frontline employees shall write their names in tamil while writing their names wherever, in accordance with the above governments and in order to implement the present notification. When writing their names in tamil, school and college students should use their initials. Only if the signature is in tamil at the time of getting the certificate after graduating from high school or college can the certification procedure be implemented. Similarly, when the student receives the signatures of his or her parents, the initials and signatures must be in Tamil.

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