On 12/15/03 08:42, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Holocaust scholars wanting to encode German documents from the 1930s
and 1940s would want the double runic S encoded, since this was a
specific character found on type-writers of the era and saw regular use.



Would <U+16CB> <U+16CB> be a reasonable substitute?


I mentioned that Sigel is avoided by some who use the Futhark symbolicly. Doubling it is obviously avoided even more. There is a practice of mirroring the second rune in a word if it is the second of a double letter (like the 'l' in 'hello'). I've wondered of late if this has any origin in how they would have originally been written (I've heard of entire lines being mirrored, such as on the Franks Casket, but not individual characters) or if it was a post-war innovation to deliberately avoid writing SS.


Is this like baseball scoreboards showing the third consecutive strikeout symbol (which is a K) reversed? Is that to avoid "KKK" or is it for another reason?

~mark


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