Hello,
The page dedicated to Latin alphabets used in USSR in 1930s
http://www.pmicro.kz/~library/unicode/index.html
has been updated recently. Latin alphabets of following languages are added:
Judeo-Tat (Mountain Jewish)
Dargwa (1928-1937)
Dungan (1928-?)
Ingush (1922-1928)
Kabardin (1924-1936
> To: James Kass
> Cc: Unicode List
> Subject: Re: Errata in language/script list: xUSSR languages
>
>
> I 've uploaded tables of Latin-based alphabets of Abazin, Awar, Adyge,
> Balkar, Bashkir, Buryat, Dargwa.to
> http://www.pmicro.kz/~library/unicode/index.html
>
> Regards,
>
> Kairat
>
>
>
>
I 've uploaded tables of Latin-based alphabets of Abazin, Awar, Adyge,
Balkar, Bashkir, Buryat, Dargwa.to
http://www.pmicro.kz/~library/unicode/index.html
Regards,
Kairat
>>Peter Constable thought maybe a "couple" and you illustrate
>>no additional characters required.
>>
>>I'll split the difference and say one.
>
>With the lower case... it's a "couple", isn't it?
I meant the upper / lower of what I think Marco proposed as 413+321, but
I'm not sure these should
James Kass wrote,> Kairat A.
Rakhim wrote,> > > I have notes about languages of former USSR
included in the > > list. In 1930th almost all of them have been
written in Latin > > script known as 'Unified New Turkic Alphabet',.or
in its > > derivatives (Common Northern Alphabet etc). It shoul
At 09:05 7/31/2001 -0500, Hohberger, Clive wrote:
>Tundra Nenets, together with Forest Nenets, forms the Nenets group of
>languages, which belongs to the Samoyed branch of the Finno-Ugrian (Uralic)
>language family. Nenets was formerly known as Yurak or Yurak Samoyed, both
>now obsolete.
Last ye
>Peter Constable thought maybe a "couple" and you illustrate
>no additional characters required.
>
>I'll split the difference and say one.
With the lower case... it's a "couple", isn't it?
Best regards
James Kass.
Marco Cimarosti wrote,
> > For a nice illustration of the Nivkh alphabet:
> > http://odur.let.rug.nl/~bergmann/russia/alphabets/nivkh.htm
>
> Seems to me that, using composing diacritics, all letters can be encoded:
>
> 410 411 412 413 492 413+321
> 414 415 40
Marco said:
> James Kass wrote:
> > Peter Constable wrote,
> >
> > > It's my understanding that the Nivkh Cyrillic writing
> > > system requires a couple of characters that are not yet
> > > in Unicode. These same characters are also required for
> > > Yupik (Central Siberian Yupik, I think -
> On 07/31/2001 05:58:57 AM Kairat A. Rakhim wrote:
>
> Cherkessian, Crimean Tatar, Kumyk, Nivkh are not yet presented in the
> list.
Peter C responded:
> It's my understanding that the Nivkh Cyrillic writing system requires a
> couple of characters that are not yet in Unicode.
Can someone pr
James Kass wrote:
> Peter Constable wrote,
>
> > It's my understanding that the Nivkh Cyrillic writing
> > system requires a couple of characters that are not yet
> > in Unicode. These same characters are also required for
> > Yupik (Central Siberian Yupik, I think -- maybe other
> > varieties
Peter Constable wrote,
> It's my understanding that the Nivkh Cyrillic writing
> system requires a couple of characters that are not yet
> in Unicode. These same characters are also required for
> Yupik (Central Siberian Yupik, I think -- maybe other
> varieties as well).
For a nice illustra
eriy E. Ushakov [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, July 31, 2001 7:48 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: Errata in language/script list: xUSSR languages
>
> On Tue, Jul 31, 2001 at 17:58:57 +0700, Kairat A. Rakhim wrote:
>
> > Nenets
> > La
Kairat A. Rakhim wrote,
> I have notes about languages of former USSR included in the
> list. In 1930th almost all of them have been written in Latin
> script known as 'Unified New Turkic Alphabet',.or in its
> derivatives (Common Northern Alphabet etc). It should be
> emphasized that these
On 07/31/2001 05:58:57 AM Kairat A. Rakhim wrote:
>Cherkessian, Crimean Tatar, Kumyk, Nivkh are not yet presented in the
list.
It's my understanding that the Nivkh Cyrillic writing system requires a
couple of characters that are not yet in Unicode. These same characters are
also required for Y
On Tue, Jul 31, 2001 at 17:58:57 +0700, Kairat A. Rakhim wrote:
> Nenets
> Latin, Cyrillic
> What is 'Netets'?
http://directory.google.com/Top/Regional/Europe/Russia/Society_and_Culture/Nationalities/Arctic_and_Siberian/Nenets/
http://directory.google.com/Top/Science/Social_Sciences
Hello,I have notes about languages of
former USSR included in the list.In 1930th almost all of them have been
written in Latin script known as 'Unified New Turkic Alphabet',.or in its
derivatives (Common Northern Alphabet etc). It should be emphasized that these
Latin-based alphabets contain
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