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     401     416     417     418     419     41A
> 41A+31B 49A     49A+31B 41B     41C     41D     4C7     41E
> 41F     41F+31B 420     420+30C 421     422     422+31B 423
> 424     425     4B2     425+335 426     427     428     429
>         42A     42B     42C     42D     42E     42F
>
> (I maintained the same layout as the beautiful chart on the above web site,
> and I removed the leading zero from codes to keep lines short.)
>

Tried a similar approach with Unipad...

   А  Б  В  Г  Ғ  Ҕ
Д  Е  Ё  Ж  З  И  Й  К
Кʼ Ӄ  Ӄʼ Л  М  Н  Ӈ  О
П  Пʼ Р  Р̌  С  Т  Тʼ У
Ф  Х  Х̡  Х̵  Ц  Ч  Ш  Щ
   Ъ  Ы  Ь  Э  Ю  Я

Peter Constable thought maybe a "couple" and you illustrate
no additional characters required.

I'll split the difference and say one.  The kh (Х̡) with hoop
should typographically match the (Ӄ).  Since the Cyrillic
Unicode encodes both (Ӄ) and (Қ), seems like the modified
(Х) should get the same treatment.

Best regards,

James Kass.




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