On 09/10/2002 01:10:19 AM Radovan Garabik wrote: >ANGSTROM SIGN is a symbol. It is not meant to be pronounced, >and if it is, it is pronounced something like IMHO /ɔŋʃtrom/ >Now, that is neither vowel nor consonant, but a whole word :-)
You might think so, but things aren't so simple. By analogy, note that, in certain contexts, "N" is to be prounced "Newtons". That has no bearing on how "N" is to be categorised. The facts are that U+212B is a copy of U+00C5, has exactly the same properties (except that U+00C5 does not have a decomposition mapping to itself), is canonically equivalent to it, and is in every way indistinguishable from it except for the name. It is not a symbol; it has a general category of "uppercase letter". - Peter --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peter Constable Non-Roman Script Initiative, SIL International 7500 W. Camp Wisdom Rd., Dallas, TX 75236, USA Tel: +1 972 708 7485 E-mail: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

