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[ font samples | what's new? | related links | home | travel phrases ] Introduction Korean is written using Hangul and a limited number of Han Ideographs. Hangul is an alphabetic/syllabic script made up of components called "jamos". These jamo conjoin into syllable blocks. Han Ideographs are called Hanja in Korea. A limited set of Hanja is used for Korean with most words being written with Hangul.
[ font samples | what's new? | related links | home | travel phrases ] Introduction Chinese languages/dialects are written using Han Ideographs. In the 1950s China began reforming the Chinese writing system in an attempt to simplify it. The reformed variety of writing is called "jiantizi" (简体字), which means "simple writing". This simplified writing is used in Singapore and most of China. Tradition
[ font samples | what's new? | related links | home | travel phrases ] Introduction The Devanagari script is a Brahmi-derived writing system used originally to write Sanskrit. It is used in India and Nepal to write many languages, including these: Konkoni: The state language of Goa, IndiaHindi: The official language of the Indian government and the state language of Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Har
[ font samples | what's new? | related links | home | travel phrases ] Introduction Chinese languages/dialects are written using Han Ideographs. Chinese populations outside China did not adopt the writing reforms implemented by mainland China in the 1950s. Therefore they continue to use the traditional variety of writing called fantizi (繁体字), which means "complex writing". This traditional writing
Background The Gallery of Unicode Fonts was created by David McCreedy and Mimi Weiss in March, 2004 as part of their Four Essential Travel Phrases website. In October, 2006 the site was ceded to WAZU JAPAN. This Gallery displays samples of available Unicode fonts by writing system (roughly equivalent to Unicode ranges). These are primarily Windows fonts, although some may work on other platforms.
[ font samples | what's new? | related links | home | travel phrases ] Introduction Japanese is written using a mixture of three scripts: Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. Latin letters (Romaji) and symbols/dingbats (Kigo) are also mixed into modern written Japanese. Hiragana & Katakana are syllabaries. The Unicode Standard refers to Kanji characters as "Han Ideographs". Some Kanji are visually diffe
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