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An updated version of the roman and italic fonts called Gentium Plus, which includes the full extended Latin, IPA, Greek, and Cyrillic coverage, was released in November 2010. Gentium Plus variants containing an additional 3,800 glyphs, including Cyrillic and additional coverage of the IPA, were added in 2010 in a release called Gentium Plus .
Y-like letters in FreeSerif — one of the few fonts that distinguish between Latin Y and Greek Υ. Deutsch: Venn-Diagramm, das die Großbuchstaben des standardisierten griechischen, lateinischen und kyrillischen Alphabets und ihre Gemeinsamkeiten zeigt.
In ancient Roman culture, the olla (archaic Latin: aula or aulla; Greek: χύτρα, chytra) [1] [2] [3] is a squat, rounded pot or jar. An olla would be used primarily to cook or store food, hence the word " olla " is still used in some Romance languages for either a cooking pot or a dish in the sense of cuisine .
So the transcriptions of Modern Greek into Latin letters used by ELOT, UN and ISO are essentially equivalent, while there remain minor differences in how they approach reversible transliteration. The American Library Association and Library of Congress romanization scheme employs its "Modern Greek" system for all works and authors following the ...
The Junicode roman character design shares a number of features with these earlier and later typefaces. Junicode has an individual Greek typeface, Foulis Greek. The design is a traditional revival as well. It is based on the Greek Double Pica cut by Alexander Wilson (c. 1714–1786), a Scottish doctor, astronomer, and typefounder
Andika (/ æ n ˈ d iː k ə /, from the verb root for 'to write' in Swahili) is a sans-serif typeface developed by SIL International for the Latin, Greek and Cyrillic scripts. It is designed for literacy programs and beginning readers, but also has support for IPA transcription and a large number of diacritics.
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on arz.wikipedia.org الألف والياء; Usage on bg.wikipedia.org Алфа и Омега; Usage on cs.wikipedia.org
Unlike Times New Roman, Doulos only has a single face, Regular. The goal of its design according to the SIL International website is to "provide a single Unicode-based font family that would contain a comprehensive inventory of glyphs needed for almost any Roman- or Cyrillic-based writing system, whether used for phonetic or orthographic needs."