World's smallest girl is in India height - 1' 11"(.338328 meters)
She stands just 1ft 11in.(.338328 meters) tall, but Jyoti Amge is not a toddler – rather she’s a 15-year-old teenager, who holds the record of being the world's smallest girl.
This extraordinary teenager, who weighs just 11 lb, is the smallest girl in the world, according to the Indian Book of Records.
Jyoti, who suffers from a form of dwarfism called achondroplasia, will never grow any taller.
But that doesn’t make the youngster unhappy or discouraged.
“I am proud of being small. I love the attention I get. I'm just the same as other people. I eat like you, dream like you. I don't feel any different,” the Mirror quoted Jyoti, as saying.
Jyoti eats off special plates, sleeps in a tiny, custom-built bed, and uses specially-made steps to help her get in the bath and a small bucket and jug to wash herself.
But, amazingly, she goes to a regular school, in Nagpur, where she studies alongside classmates of her own age, though she sits at a specially made miniature desk.
Jyoti’s mother, Ranjana, 45, said that her daughter's condition was not evident until some time after her birth.
“When Joyti was born she seemed quite normal. We came to know about her disorder when she was five,” Ranjana said.
“Jyoti is small, yet cute, and we love her very much,” she added. News Via
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This extraordinary teenager, who weighs just 11 lb, is the smallest girl in the world, according to the Indian Book of Records.
Jyoti, who suffers from a form of dwarfism called achondroplasia, will never grow any taller.
But that doesn’t make the youngster unhappy or discouraged.
“I am proud of being small. I love the attention I get. I'm just the same as other people. I eat like you, dream like you. I don't feel any different,” the Mirror quoted Jyoti, as saying.
Jyoti eats off special plates, sleeps in a tiny, custom-built bed, and uses specially-made steps to help her get in the bath and a small bucket and jug to wash herself.
But, amazingly, she goes to a regular school, in Nagpur, where she studies alongside classmates of her own age, though she sits at a specially made miniature desk.
Jyoti’s mother, Ranjana, 45, said that her daughter's condition was not evident until some time after her birth.
“When Joyti was born she seemed quite normal. We came to know about her disorder when she was five,” Ranjana said.
“Jyoti is small, yet cute, and we love her very much,” she added. News Via
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