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Alifonts, widely used with Windows 98, enabled typing of Kurdish with Arabic or Farsi keyboard layouts. While it uses a non-standard mapping, typing Kurdish with Alifonts remains popular, as it does not require a specific Kurdish keyboard layout.
It does show the two pharyngeal consonants, as well as a voiced velar fricative, used in Kurdish. A new sort order for the alphabet was proposed some time ago by the Kurdish Academy as the new standard, [11] all of which are letters accepted included in the Central Kurdish Unicode Keyboard: [12]
A dvorak version (traditional Canadian French layout) is also supported by Microsoft Windows. In this keyboard, the key names are translated to French: ⇪ Caps Lock is Fix Maj or Verr Maj (short for Fixer/Verrouiller Majuscule, meaning Lock Uppercase). ↵ Enter is ↵ Entrée. [11] Esc is Échap.
Gadugi (Microsoft Windows font, available in Windows 8 and later) Kurinto Font Folio (11 typefaces that have "Main" variant fonts) Noto Sans Cherokee (direct download link), a font made by Google (also supports lowercase) Plantagenet Cherokee (Microsoft Windows font, available in Windows Vista and later)
EurKEY keyboard layout. EurKEY is a multilingual keyboard layout which is intended for Europeans, programmers and translators and was developed by Steffen Brüntjen and published under the GPL free software license. It is available for common desktop operating systems such as Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. [1]
Cyrillic Extended-C: U+1C80–U+1C8F, 11 characters; Cyrillic Extended-D: U+1E030–U+1E08F, 63 characters; Phonetic Extensions: U+1D2B, U+1D78, 2 Cyrillic characters; Combining Half Marks: U+FE2E–U+FE2F, 2 Cyrillic characters; The characters in the range U+0400–U+045F are basically the characters from ISO 8859-5 moved upward by 864 positions.
Today's NYT Connections puzzle for Wednesday, February 19, 2025The New York Times
The main tenses: . Min nan dexom. (Present) "I am eating the meal." Min nanim xward. (Past) "I ate the meal." Past Perfect Tense (Intransitive) For intransitive verbs with past stems ending in a consonant (like hatin > hat-), the past perfect tense, which is functionally equivalent to the English past perfect (‘I had come, you had gone’), is formed from the past stem + i + the past tense ...