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Amam's commentary is the only one to provide a brief imaginative description of each of the Armenian letters. The most significant of the subsequent Armenian authors to engage with the subject of grammar were the 13th-century writers Vardan Areveltsi and Hovhannes Erznkatsi. [15] Title page of A. Tashyan's book Review of Armenian Palaeography, 1898
An American correspondent in Marash in 1864 calls the alphabet "Armeno-Turkish", describing it as consisting of 31 Armenian letters and "infinitely superior" to the Arabic or Greek alphabets for rendering Turkish. [21] This Armenian script was used alongside the Arabic script on official documents of the Ottoman Empire written in Ottoman Turkish.
English: "Armenian language" (Հայերէն) written in the Armenian alphabet. Spelling in the traditional Armenian orthography. Spelling in the traditional Armenian orthography. Font used is "NorKirk".
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a soft sign (a prime, US-MARC hexadecimal code A7) is inserted between two separate letters that would otherwise be interpreted as a digraph (in red in the table below); no prime is present in the middle of romanized digraphs zh, kh, ts, dz, gh and ch representing a single Armenian letter; with the Classical Armenian orthography only, the vowel ...
Sylfaen is a multi-script serif font family designed by John Hudson and W. Ross Mills of Tiro Typeworks, and Geraldine Wade of Monotype Typography. The name Sylfaen is a Welsh word meaning foundation. [1] In 1997, Tiro was hired by Microsoft Typography to consult on the production of support materials for OpenType font development.