RomanCyrillic Std v. 7

Online Documentation incl. support for v. 9, 10, and 11 (2016–2018)

UNi A PDF code З ! Ѿ

© Sebastian Kempgen 2018 2 RomanCyrillic Std: new in v. 7

Version 6 of RomanCyrillic Std implements all relevant additions from Unicode versions 9 (2016), 10 (2017), and 11 (2018).

Mainly, they are:

• Glagolitic superscripts (transliterated here); • Typicon symbols and marks (East Slavic Orthodox printing); • Various small additions and corrections. In this documentation, new additions are marked in red; other notes are in blue.

The font is free for academic use. Commercial licenses are available. The font is not in the public domain. No modification or disassembling is allowed. All rights are reserved by the author. 3 RomanCyrillic Std: its mission

RomanCyrillic Std enables scholars, especially Slavists and Medievalists in general, linguists, editors, teachers etc. to display and write all the characters they need - including historical ones, accents, , phonetics etc. It’s the Swiss Army knife of fonts for the Latin, Greek, Coptic, and script - plus many more transliterated ones (like Glagolitic). It is updated regularly in accordance with new releases of the

Unicode® standard. The font blends perfectly with Times® and

Times New Roman®, and does many things better much than these!

The font is free for academic use. Commercial licenses are available. The font is not in the public domain. No modification or disassembling is allowed. All rights are reserved by the author. 4 RomanCyrillic Std: Basic Latin

The Basics; nothing special here 5 RomanCyrillic Std: Latin 1-Supplement

The Basics; nothing special here 6 RomanCyrillic Std: Latin Extended-A

Croatian

long s 7 RomanCyrillic Std: Latin Extended Add. (1)

Transliteration Transliteration for Old Russian for Macedonian Fita 8 RomanCyrillic Std: Latin Extended Add.

Uppercase sharp s 9 RomanCyrillic Std: Latin Extended-B (1)

Transliteration for Serbian Cyrillic 10 RomanCyrillic Std: Latin Extended-B (2)

Transliteration for Macedonian

Štokavian Accents (for Croatian) Note: r̀ is not implemented in Unicode as such 11 RomanCyrillic Std: Latin Extended-C

RomanCyrillic Std: Latin Extended-E 12 RomanCyrillic Std: Latin Extended-D (1)

Round R/r 13 RomanCyrillic Std: Latin Extended-D (2)

New in UC 9–11: Latin capital letter small capital ɪ Latin letter small capital Q (gemination)

New in UC 11: Latin capital letter U with stroke Latin small letter u with stroke 14 RomanCyrillic Std: Alphabetic Presentation Forms

Latin ligatures 15 RomanCyrillic Std: Cyrillic (Slavic)

combining characters: , palatalization, breathing marks, 16 RomanCyrillic Std: Cyrillic (non-Slavic)

combining characters: titlo, palatalization, spiritus, bow, numbers 17 RomanCyrillic Std: Cyrillic Extended Add.

(Non-Slavic) 18 RomanCyrillic Std: Cyrillic Extended B

vzmet (abbrev.), for Cyrillic and Glagolitic

kavyka & payerok

ten, hundred, thousand millions these jers are for Lithuanian combining characters dialectology (raised chars.) 19 RomanCyrillic Std: Cyrillic Extended B [samples]

vzmet

sample numbers: 20 RomanCyrillic Std: Cyrillic Extended A

all: combining characters

RomanCyrillic Std: Cyrillic Extended C

NEW in UC 9 (2016): Russian synodal printing etc. (lowercase only) round “v”, long-legged “d”, narrow “o”, broad “s”, high “t”, three-legged “t”, high tverdyj znak, high yat’, stacked o-y (not ligated) 21 RomanCyrillic Std: Glagolitic (translit.)

note the different shapes small Glagolitic subscript ‘T’ for these two Croatian indicates transliterated characters so they can be characters! distinguished even in transliteration 22 RomanCyrillic Std: Glagolitic Supplement (superscripts; transliterated)

small Glagolitic superscript ‘T’ indicates transliterated characters! 23 RomanCyrillic Std: Greek & Coptic 24 RomanCyrillic Std: Greek Extended (1) 25 RomanCyrillic Std: Greek Extended (2)

combining characters 26 RomanCyrillic Std: Coptic 27 RomanCyrillic Std: Phonetic (IPA) 28 RomanCyrillic Std: Phonetic Extensions

all: spacing characters 29 RomanCyrillic Std: Phonetic Extensions Suppl.

all: spacing characters 30 RomanCyrillic Std: Spacing Modifiers

transliteration for Cyrillic soft sign & hard sign (UC names: ‘’ & ‘double prime’) ‘’ letter

all: spacing characters 31 RomanCyrillic Std: Combining Diacritical Marks

all: combining characters corrected shape in UC 10 (rectangle, not square) 32 RomanCyrillic Std: Comb. Diacr. Marks [samples]

combining vertical = yerik

double - between 2 chars 33 RomanCyrillic Std: Combining Diacritics Suppl.

combining supension mark New (UC 10, 2017): Typicon marks (combining) (Glagolitic) kavyka above right / above left above left wide inverted bridge below RomanCyrillic Std: Combining Halfmarks

left, right (middle) combining titlo (left, right) 34 RomanCyrillic Std: Combining Halfmarks [samples]

ligature dbl tilde macrons titlo L R L R L R long L R

long middle part 35 RomanCyrillic Std: Combining Diacritics Extd.

all: combining characters RomanCyrillic Std: Currency Symbols

Rouble sign! new in UC 10: Bitcoin RomanCyrillic Std: Letterlike Symbols 37 RomanCyrillic Std: Comb. Diacritics for Symbols

the circle is used for the Slavic «ten thousand» sign when combined with letters 38 RomanCyrillic Std: Enclosed Alphanumerics 39 RomanCyrillic Std: Fractions & Roman Numbers 40 RomanCyrillic Std: Counting Rods

New in UC 11, 2018: Ideographic tally marks 1 to 5; Western tally mark 1 and 5 RomanCyrillic Std: Comb. Modifier Tone Letters 41 RomanCyrillic Std: Superscripts and Subscripts

RomanCyrillic Std: Small Form Variants 42 RomanCyrillic Std: General

200B = «zero space» useful for invisible line break control in long URLs!

First row: different space characters (large to zero)

“swungdash” punctuation marks RomanCyrillic Std: Supplemental Punctuation 43

New in UC 9 (2016) Slavonic dash with left upturn

new in UC 10 (2017): new in UC 11 (2018): Slavic Typicon Historic punctuation punctuation; (various) inverted low kavyka, double kavyka, low kavyka, kavyka with dot, double stacked RomanCyrillic Std: Supplemental Punctuation 44

Vertical tilde = Cyrillic yerik (spacing)

word separator middle dot raised dot

German straight double Slavic Typicon punctuation: inverted low kavyka, double Slavonic kavyka, low kavyka, kavyka dash with left upturn with dot, double stacked comma 45 RomanCyrillic Std: Arrows

RomanCyrillic Std: Specials 46 RomanCyrillic Std: Gothic (translit.)

Note: all transliterated scripts have a small mark below to indicate the transliteration status 47 RomanCyrillic Std: Armenian (translit.)

New in UC 11 (2018): two characters used for phonetics

Note: all transliterated scripts have a small mark below to indicate the transliteration status 48 RomanCyrillic Std: Georgian (translit.)

Note: all transliterated scripts have a small mark below to indicate the transliteration status 49 RomanCyrillic Std: Old Persian Cuneiform (translit.)

RomanCyrillic Std: Old South Arabian (translit.)

Note: all transliterated scripts have a small mark below to indicate the transliteration status 50 RomanCyrillic Std: Dingbats (1) 51 RomanCyrillic Std: Dingbats (2) 52 RomanCyrillic Std: Geometric Shapes 53 RomanCyrillic Std: Misc. Symbols

Orthodox cross (corrected shape UC 10) 54 RomanCyrillic Std: Ancient Symbols

RomanCyrillic Std: Ornamental Dingbats

New: ornamental leafs 55 RomanCyrillic Std: Misc. Technical (1)

long brackets 56 RomanCyrillic Std: Misc. Technical (2)

long / short syllables 57 RomanCyrillic Std: Mathematical Operators (1) 58 RomanCyrillic Std: Mathematical Operators (2) 59 RomanCyrillic Std: Suppl. Symbols and Picts

New in UC 10 (2017): Slavonic typicon symbols

RomanCyrillic Std: Misc. Math. Symbols

long brackets 60 RomanCyrillic Std: OpenType Glyphs (1)

Note that these OpenType characters do not have a Unicode number! They are produced automatically (if the application supports OT programming) 61 RomanCyrillic Std: OpenType Glyphs (2)

Note that these OpenType characters do not have a Unicode number! They are produced automatically (if the application supports OT programming) 62 RomanCyrillic Std: OpenType Glyphs (3)

Note that these OpenType characters do not have a Unicode number! They are produced automatically (if the application supports OT programming) 63 Roman and Cyrillic

“Roman and Cyrillic are structurally identical alphabets that are easily transliterated into each other. The motivation for substituting one for the other is primarily ideological rather than practical” (Florian Coulmas 2013)

“Roman and Cyrillic are structurally identical alphabets that are easily transliterated into each other. The motivation for substituting one for the other is primarily ideological rather than practical” (Florian Coulmas 2013) ➜ ➜

Download te font fom: http://kodeks.uni-bamberg.de/AKSLSchrift/RomanCyrillicStd.htm

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RomanCyrillic Std v 7 Font Documentation © Prof. Dr. Sebastian Kempgen 2018 [email protected] https://www.uni-bamberg.de/slavling/personal/prof-em-dr-sebastian-kempgen/ All Rights Reserved.

See my commercial fonts at my web-site