A custom version of Urvanian. See my original Urvanian font to see the entire description.
This is a clone of Urvanian Expanded(Both Urvanian fonts are cloneable and downloadable.) Urvanian is an abugida-related language spoken by the Urvana (singular: Urvanum) in a galaxy approximately 3.2 billion light-years away. The derivation of the name "Urvanian" is the word "curve" (without the C), since the letters are mostly curves. Some letters resemble Latin letters (u, o, n, m, l, w). There are even a few diacritics (vowels)! The letters do not have any pronunciation at all. Even the smartest researchers out there couldn't find out how even the first letter is pronounced. Yet I have the full language (consonants, vowels, modifiers)!
Finally done! The Vietnamese version of Zerondo.
Thanks ELMOYENIQUE for letting me clone and finish another language for this font!
Update: Added the Ĩ that I have forgotten about.
font for the Quat language. note that:
the letter for /ɨ/ is mapped to the character Y
the letter for /j/ is mapped to the character J
the letter for /ʃ/ is mapped to the character H
the "number start" & "number end" symbols are mapped to [ and ] respectively
the letters can't connect; i don't want to manually draw out every syllable
Based on ClaWrite by Baxil and the FontStruct version by goakley. Narrowed character size, added numbers, modified letters, simplified punctuation, and extended to Latin-1 Supplement.
Numbers are symmetric in two axis while letters are not.
The number system is designed for base 12.
https://usermanual.wiki/Document/Guide20to20the20Rlyehian20Font.758052807.pdf
this is a PDF and a guide to the language. This is a language and yes these symbols mean something. I created it because I was not able to find a free font like this online. This language comes from the R’lyehian Alphabet. The goal was to design an alphabet that matched H.P. Lovecraft’s description of the ancient language. To do that it needed
1. To hang down from “horizontal word lines”
2. To be hieroglyphic in nature
3. Not be like Naacal (i.e. ancient Mayan) \
4. Not be like the hieroglyphics of Easter Island (Rongorongo)
The next most obvious hieroglyphics after that would be Egyptian, so putting all that together translated to something that combined a Devanagari style with symbols that could have eventually led to the Egyptian hieroglyphics.
THE LOWERCASE AND UPPERCASE
This is a set of letters for Upper Case versions of each letter. The idea is that the language and concepts of the language are non-Euclidean and non-linear, so there is nothing stopping someone from writing it to change directions or change the orientation of the letters. Long story short, these are either backward, at right angles, or upside-down, and in some cases tweaked so they seem fairly different from the basic alphabet. Using capital letters gives variety to the writing, but also makes it harder to read.
(I just inverted most of the letters and the lower case and uppercase are switched so just beware that if you type without caps lock you will be typing in uppercase)
If you have any questions consult the PDF and if it's not in the PDF then I don't know I will be adding an image of what symbols correspond to the keys on the keyboard (if there's already an image then ignore the last bit)
I'm not Uber Goober games btw I have no connection to them and they are responsible for the language.
This is a work in progress. I am still learning about language development.
Not a font but a fast way of getting a whole word written with the touch of one single keyboard key.
CHRISTMAS / YULE in several languages, using the Latin alphabet. Ideal for use in play groups etc. Great for printing, cutting out and then decorating the letters ;)
French
German
Dutch
Danish/Swedish/Norwegian
Spanish
Welsh
English
Hungarian
Portugese; Gujarati, Marathi, Indonesian
Finnish
Maori
Italian, Corsican
Breton
Greek
Icelandic
Hindi
Sanskrit
Irish, Gaelig
Japanese
Esperanto
Latin
Turkish
Scots
A neat language of combining letters to create even more unique characters. Based on some languages like Armenian. Work in progress.
WORK IN PROGRESS.
Anatoli Font for use in Anatoli
[https://lingojam.com/Anatoli]
(Complete basic latin set). First iteration of a font meant to be used as a substitution cypher in a videogame set in a very far future. Letters are, with a few exceptions, inspired by their corresponding latin glyph. Numbers look a bit like cells dividing in a petri dish. Punctuation and symbols are designed for easy recognition.
Updated version: https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/2100999/far-future-1