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  2. Runic (Unicode block) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runic_(Unicode_block)

    The division between Elder Futhark, Younger Futhark and Anglo-Saxon runes are well-established and useful categories, but they are connected by a continuum of gradual development, inscriptions using a mixture of older and newer forms of runes, etc. For this reason, the runic Unicode block is of very limited usefulness in representing of ...

  3. Elder Futhark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elder_Futhark

    The Elder Futhark (or Fuþark), also known as the Older Futhark, Old Futhark, or Germanic Futhark, is the oldest form of the runic alphabets. It was a writing system used by Germanic peoples for Northwest Germanic dialects in the Migration Period .

  4. Anglo-Saxon runes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_runes

    The futhorc was a development from the older co-Germanic 24-character runic alphabet, known today as Elder Futhark, expanding to 28 characters in its older form and up to 34 characters in its younger form. In contemporary Scandinavia, the Elder Futhark developed into a shorter 16-character alphabet, today simply called Younger Futhark.

  5. Rune - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rune

    The Unicode block for Runic alphabets is U+16A0–U+16FF. It is intended to encode the letters of the Elder Futhark, the Anglo-Frisian runes, and the Younger Futhark long-branch and short-twig (but not the staveless) variants, in cases where cognate letters have the same shape resorting to "unification".

  6. Dalecarlian runes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalecarlian_runes

    Elder Futhark. Younger Futhark. Medieval runes. ... Consequently, the Dalrunes could instead be represented using glyphs from the Basic Latin Unicode block.

  7. Wynn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wynn

    It is not continued in the Younger Futhark, but in the Gothic alphabet, the letter 𐍅 w is called winja, allowing a Proto-Germanic reconstruction of the rune's name as *wunjô "joy". It is one of the two runes (along with thorn, þ ) to have been borrowed into the English alphabet (or any extension of the Latin alphabet ).

  8. Medieval runes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_runes

    The medieval runes, or the futhork, was a Scandinavian runic alphabet that evolved from the Younger Futhark after the introduction of stung (or dotted) runes at the end of the Viking Age. These stung runes were regular runes with the addition of either a dot diacritic or bar diacritic to indicate that the rune stood for one of its secondary ...

  9. Modern runic writing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_runic_writing

    Tolkien's mode of writing Modern English in Anglo-Saxon runes received explicit recognition with the introduction of three extra runes to the Unicode Runic block used by him in Unicode version 7.0 (2014). The three characters represent the English k, oo and sh graphemes, as follows: