Re: Con-Alphabets & Real Languages
From: | Karapcik, Mike <karapcik@...> |
Date: | Wednesday, January 2, 2002, 2:57 |
Actually, if you look at the unicode ranges (www.unicode.org), there are
accomodations for two standards. One is the katakana U with a dakuten for
"vu", and U+dakuten followed by the subscript a-gyo for "v" plus the other
vowels.
The other one, which I find more interresting, is using the wa-gyo (wa,
wi, u [u from a-gyo], we, wo) plus a dakuten for the va-gyo.
-----Original Message-----
From: jogloran
To: CONLANG@LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU
Sent: 1/1/02 1:27 AM
Subject: Re: Con-Alphabets & Real Languages
Wait a moment... how strange, as far as I know, the only way to
represent the /v/ sounds is the character U with a voicing mark,
followed by a small a, i, u, e or o.
Are you sure it's written with a WA then a subscript i? Because WA
and U look very alike...
Imperative