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Tagalog is a Unicode block containing characters of the Baybayin script, specifically the variety used for writing the Tagalog language before and during Spanish colonization of the Philippines eventually led to the adoption of the Latin alphabet. It has been a part of the Unicode Standard since version 3.2 in April 2002.
Baybayin originally used only one punctuation mark (᜶), which was called Bantasán. [60] [61] Today baybayin uses two punctuation marks, the Philippine single (᜵) punctuation, acting as a comma or verse splitter in poetry, and the double punctuation (᜶), acting as a period or end of paragraph.
SVG version of File:Lupang-hinirang baybayin.png. Remixes File:Una_sfida_al_Polo_deco.png (public domain image automatically traced to become vector) and File:Flag_of_the_Philippines.svg (public domain) as well. The font used in the image is Noto Sans Tagalog, an OFL licensed font. Author
Noto Sans Tagalog, a font made by Google; Paul Morrow's Baybayin Fonts. Offers the most extensive list of Baybayin fonts for Windows and Macintosh operating systems; Quivira is a proportional serif font that produces very readable text. Supports several scripts, among them the Baybayin script
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on ar.wikipedia.org ويكيبيديا:شعارات ويكيبيديا; شعار ويكيبيديا
This template is used to mark text written in Baybayin script, using a set of specific fonts and a specific font size. TemplateData This is the TemplateData for this template used by TemplateWizard , VisualEditor and other tools.
Basahan in a Mural Front cover of Mintz's bikol dictionary shows Basahan script. Basahan script, also known as Guhit, is the native name used by Bicolanos to refer to Baybayin. The word basahan was already recorded in a book entitled Vocabulario de la Lengua Bicol by Marcos de Lisboa in 1628, which states it has three vowels and fifteen ...
Old Tagalog (Tagalog: Lumang Tagalog; Baybayin: pre-virama: ᜎᜓᜋ ᜆᜄᜎᜓ, post-virama [krus kudlit]: ᜎᜓᜋᜅ᜔ ᜆᜄᜎᜓᜄ᜔; post-virama [pamudpod]: ᜎᜓᜋᜅ᜕ ᜆᜄᜎᜓᜄ᜕), also known as Old Filipino, is the earliest form of the Tagalog language during the Classical period.