Mark Davis wrote:

> BTW, someone on this thread made this topic out to be even more complex than
> is: that Devanagari and Korean are written without spaces. While that may
> have been the case historically, I believe that the modern text does use
> spaces. Chinese, Japanese and Thai are the main languages written without
> spaces.

Several Indic languages/scripts do not use spaces (or other marker characters) between 
words or syllables. I don't think you can even rely on spaces between words for all 
the different Indic languages that use only the devanagari script.  

Tibetan script has a "syllable" (or morpheme) separator [U+0F0B] which provides a line 
break opportunity - but in modern Dzongkha (Bhutanese)  this character is dropped in 
many places where a reader can determine the boundary by grammatical rules. BTW In 
traditional Tibetan orthography, a space is *not* a line break opportunity.

- Chris  

--
Chris Fynn 
DDC Dzongkha Computing Project
Thimphu, Bhutan.

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