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- To: unicode@unicode.org
- Subject: Why there is a MODIFIER LETTER TURNED COMMA but no MODIFIER LETTER FULL STOP?
- From: Karl Pentzlin <karl-pentzlin@acssoft.de>
- Date: Fri, 23 May 2008 12:08:49 +0200
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- Reply-to: Karl Pentzlin <karl-pentzlin@acssoft.de>
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The turned comma is used as a letter in Hawaiian (denoting the glottal stop). The punctution mark U+2018 LEFT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK has the correct appearance and could be used, but there is U+02BB MODIFIER LETTER TURNED COMMA (which of course is better suited for use as a letter due to its properties). The full stop is used as a letter in Tlingit (spoken in Akaska and British Columbia), denoting the glottal stop (see e.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tlingit_language or the attached picture of a museum display in Juneau, Alaska). Why there is no MODIFIER LETTER FULL STOP in analogy to the MODIFIER LETTER TURNED COMMA? Has a proposal to encode a MODIFIER LETTER FULL STOP (MODIFIER LETTER BASELINE DOT seems to be a more appropriate name) based on such evidence (i.e. some more examples and a more thrustworthy source for its use than Wikipedia) any chance to be successful? - Karl PentzlinAttachment: BILD0796a2.jpg
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