On Wed, 9 Jan 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> ...found it unreadable due to the Fraktur font that was used for German 
> at the time. That is, the primary font used for Roman characters for 
> German up until 1945 is unreadable for readers of German...

Minor quibble:  the transition date was somewhat earlier, if you consider
practice in Germany to be authoritative for the German language.  Use of a
more conventional Roman font for German was one of Hitler's minor reforms,
if I recall correctly. 

More major quibble:  I'm surprised that someone with serious background in
German hadn't been exposed to Fraktur fonts.  There is still a *lot* of
old material written in them -- especially, I guess, in German communities
outside Hitler's former domain -- although very little new stuff has used
them for the last half-century. 

However, the point remains valid:  the Fraktur fonts, which have at least
a strong historical presence in Latin-alphabet texts, are unreadable to a
lot of Latin-alphabet users, and were nevertheless unified. 

                                                          Henry Spencer
                                                       [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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