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Character information Preview す ス ス ㋜ Unicode name HIRAGANA LETTER SU KATAKANA LETTER SU HALFWIDTH KATAKANA LETTER SU CIRCLED KATAKANA SU Encodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hex Unicode: 12377: U+3059: 12473: U+30B9: 65405: U+FF7D: 13020: U+32DC UTF-8: 227 129 153: E3 81 99: 227 130 185: E3 82 B9: 239 189 189: EF BD BD: 227 139 ...
Dragonshard (PC, September 2005) is a real-time strategy game. Dungeons & Dragons Online (PC, February 2006) is a massively multiplayer online roleplaying game initially set in Eberron, although updates throughout its lifetime added elements from the Forgotten Realms campaign setting.
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on ar.wikipedia.org سُو (كانا) Usage on blk.wikipedia.org သု (ခန) Usage on de.wikipedia.org
The hiragana symbols are also ordered in a consistent way across different keyboards. For example, the Q, W, E, R, T, Y keys correspond to た, て, い, す, か, ん (ta, te, i, su, ka, and n) respectively when the computer is used for direct hiragana input.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.
Enclosed Ideographic Supplement (Unicode block) has a single hiragana character: U+1F200 Kana Supplement (Unicode block) has a single katakana and 255 hentaigana characters Kana Extended-A (Unicode block) continues with additional 31 hentaigana characters
An updated Player Character Record Sheets pack for AD&D (serialized as REF2), with a new cover by Keith Parkinson, was released in 1986 as a 64-page booklet. [2]: 112 REF2 Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Player Character Record Sheets is a booklet containing 16 character sheets, with sufficient spaces included to record information for AD&D characters.
Similarly to JIS X 0201 (itself incorporated into Shift JIS), Japanese EBCDIC encodings often include a set of single-byte katakana.Several different variants of the single-byte EBCDIC code are used in the Japanese locale, by different vendors; a given vendor may also define two different single-byte codes, one favoured for half-width katakana and one favoured for Latin script.