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The Unicode characters ⅁, ⅂, ⅄ are specified as sans-serif. A normal turned Y, , has been accepted for Unicode 16. Additional small cap forms are found in the literature (e.g. turned ᴀ ʟ ᴜ), but are not supported as of Unicode 15. Other rotated letters include the digraphs ᴂ and ᴔ.
The rest of the letters have been encoded into the Unicode IPA section, generating a complete set of upside-down lowercase letters. With the addition of the Fraser alphabet to the Unicode standard in version 5.2, full (or at least near-full) support for upside-down capital letters is now available.
Modifier Letter Small Reversed Glottal Stop U+02E5 ˥ 741 Modifier Letter Extra-High Tone Bar: U+02E6 ˦ 742 Modifier Letter High Tone Bar: U+02E7 ˧ 743 Modifier Letter Mid Tone Bar: U+02E8 ˨ 744 Modifier Letter Low Tone Bar: U+02E9 ˩ 745 Modifier Letter Extra-Low Tone Bar: U+02EA ˪ 746 Modifier Letter Yin Departing Tone Mark U+02EB ˫ 747
This is a list of letters of the Latin script. The definition of a Latin-script letter for this list is a character encoded in the Unicode Standard that has a script property of 'Latin' and the general category of 'Letter'. An overview of the distribution of Latin-script letters in Unicode is given in Latin script in Unicode.
The capitulum character is obsolete, being replaced by pilcrow, but is included in Unicode for backward compatibility and historic studies. The pilcrow symbol was included in the default hardware codepage 437 of IBM PCs (and all other 8-bit OEM codepages based on this) at code point 20 (0x14), which is an ASCII control character .
Spacing Modifier Letters is a Unicode block containing characters for the IPA, UPA, and other phonetic transcriptions. Included are the IPA tone marks, and modifiers for aspiration and palatalization. The word spacing indicates that these characters occupy their own
Bidirectional script support is the capability of a computer system to correctly display bidirectional text. The term is often shortened to "BiDi" or "bidi".Early computer installations were designed only to support a single writing system, typically for left-to-right scripts based on the Latin alphabet only.
The Unicode characters for superscript (modifier) IPA and extIPA consonant letters are as follows. The entire Latin Extended-F block is dedicated to superscript IPA. Characters for sounds with secondary articulation are set off in parentheses and placed below the base letters.