When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Nanum fonts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanum_fonts

    The Nanum fonts (Korean: 나눔글꼴; RR: Nanum Geulkkol) is a series of open source unicode fonts designed for the Korean language, designed by Sandoll Communications and Fontrix (Korean: 폰트릭스).

  3. Malgun Gothic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malgun_Gothic

    Malgun Gothic (Korean: 맑은 고딕; RR: Malgeun Godik) is a Korean sans-serif typeface developed by Sandoll Communications, with hinting by Monotype Imaging, [1] as a replacement of Dotum and Gulim as the default system font for the Korean language.

  4. List of CJK fonts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_CJK_fonts

    This is a list of notable CJK fonts (computer fonts with a large range of Chinese/Japanese/Korean characters). These fonts are primarily sorted by their typeface , the main classes being "with serif", "without serif" and "script".

  5. Source Han Sans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_Han_Sans

    Source Han Sans is a sans-serif gothic typeface family created by Adobe and Google.It is also released by Google under the Noto fonts project as Noto Sans CJK. [4] The family includes seven weights, and supports Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Japanese and Korean.

  6. Help:Multilingual support (East Asian) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Multilingual_support...

    Throughout Wikipedia, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese and Zhuang characters (CJKV characters) are used in relevant articles.. Computers with older operating systems with the default language set to English or other Western or Cyrillic language settings will require some setup and proper fonts (See also: List of CJK fonts) to be able to display the characters.

  7. Ming typefaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ming_typefaces

    Ming or Song is a category of typefaces used to display Chinese characters, which are used in the Chinese, Japanese and Korean languages. They are currently the most common style of type in print for Chinese and Japanese. For Japanese and Korean text, they are commonly called Mincho and Myeongjo typefaces respectively.

  8. New Gulim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Gulim

    New Gulim (새굴림/SaeGulRim) is a sans-serif type Unicode font designed especially for the Korean-language script, designed by HanYang System Co., Limited (now Hanyang Information & Communications Co., Ltd). It is an expanded version of Hanyang Gulrim (한양 굴림). Font is hinted at 0–13 points, hinted and smoothed at 14 points or higher.

  9. Source Han Serif - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_Han_Serif

    Korean fonts support CJK ideographs in KS X 1001 and KS X 1002. Noto Serif CJK fonts are released as individual fonts separated by language and weight, or as OTC fonts containing all language variants separated by weight, or OTC fonts containing all weights separated by language, or a single OTC font containing all languages and weights.