"Peter Constable" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > TH WITH STRIKETHROUGH > > ITALIC TH LIGATED BY HOOK > > PLAIN TH LIGATED BY CROSSBAR > > > > three separate glyphic representations of the same character > > > > LEXICOGRAPHIC VOICED TH > > No; three separate character representations of the same orthographic > function.
Why are they seperate characters? They are seperate glyphs, but that doesn't make them seperate characters. They're all ligated th's used for the same purpose, with more glyphic similarity than many of the other glyphs unifed in the Unicode standard. > Me thinks the editorial staff of a given dictionary publisher that needs > to maintain it's conventions across different editions will certainly > say "yes". Does said editorial staff also need serif versions of all the Latin characters encoded so that the convention of using a serif font for the dictionary is also maintained? If they reset the text in a gaelic font, or even in a san-serif font for a compressed pocket edition, would the differences between the characters make any difference? I seriously doubt it. -- ___________________________________________________________ Sign-up for Ads Free at Mail.com http://promo.mail.com/adsfreejump.htm

