> This is a character under ballot for Amendment 1 to the 5th edition. It > isn't part of the repertoire planned for publication as part of Unicode 10.0 > in June.
I see. Thank you for the information. I'll remember it until Unicode 11's term. 2017-01-12 4:37 GMT+09:00 Ken Whistler <[email protected]>: > This is a character under ballot for Amendment 1 to the 5th edition. It > isn't part of the repertoire planned for publication as part of Unicode 10.0 > in June. > > So if you want to have any impact on the subhead used in the charts for > A7AF, the correct mechanism now is to get a national body comment added in > their vote on Amendment 1. > > Either that, or just put in tickler in your calendar for February, 201*8*, > when the beta review for Unicode *11* will be starting, so you can then make > a suggestion as part of the Unicode beta review period. > > Otherwise, these suggestions are just going to end up lost under the pile of > the subsequent 13 months worth of email on unrelated topics. ;-) > > --Ken > > > > On 12/27/2016 8:44 PM, Yifán Wáng wrote: >> >> Now I start to wonder if the description would be "Letter for >> phonetics and Japanese phonology" or "Letter for scholarly >> transcription" etc. >> >> 2016-12-27 18:54 GMT+09:00 Denis Jacquerye <[email protected]>: >>> >>> For what it’s worth, the small capital q was used as an IPA symbol for a >>> while. It was used for the Arabic ʻayn as a “consonne roulée gutturale” >>> in >>> the 1898 IPA chart (previously noted 3 in the 1894 IPA charts and ᴈ in >>> some >>> 1895 IPA charts and later charts) then as a “consonne fricative >>> bronchiale >>> sonore” in the 1905 and 1908 IPA charts, and in the notes after the IPA >>> chart in 1912. It was eventually replaced with the reversed glottal stop >>> ʕ, >>> for example in the 1932 IPA chart or later charts. >> >> >

