I am going to expand this font. Why not, after all? It is my best work so far.
ALL BLOCKS UPDATED TO UNICODE 16.0!!
UNICODE BLOCKS INCLUDED:
Basic Latin
Latin Supplement
Latin Extended A
Latin Extended B
Latin Extended Additional
Latin Extended C
Latin Extended D
Latin Extended E
Latin Extended F
Latin Extended G
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IPA Extensions
Spacing Modifier Letters
Phonetic Extensions
Phonetic Extensions Supplement
Modifier Tone Letters
Ancient Symbols
Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms (only Latin, Symbols and Katakana)
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Cyrillic (Basic)
Cyrillic Supplement
Cyrillic Extended A
Cyrillic Extended B
Cyrillic Extended C
Cyrillic Extended D
(Anbur/Old Permic)
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Greek and Coptic
Greek Extended
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Ethiopic
Ethiopic Supplement
Ethiopic Extended
Ethiopic Extended A
Ethiopic Extended B
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Armenian (Would really appreciate feedback)
Hebrew
N'Ko
Georgian
Georgian Extended
Georgian Supplement
Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllables
Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllables Extended
Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics Extended-A
Cherokee
Cherokee Supplement
Ogham
Runic
Tifinagh
Lisu
Lisu Supplement
Phags-pa
Zanabazar Square
Mro
Old Italic
Phoenician
Carian
Lycian
Lydian
Gothic
Deseret
Shavian
Komi/Anbur/Old Permic
Elbasan
Osage
Pahawh Hmong
Toto
Old South Arabian
Old North Arabian
Adlam
Glagolitic
Glagolitic Extended
Old Turkic
Old Hungarian (Rovásírás)
Marchen
Buhid
Bamum
Kayah Li
Hatran
Yezidi
Caucasian Albanian
Miao
Masaram Gondi
Chorasmian
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Hangul Jamo
(only modern Hangeul for now, I am desperate for feedback here!)
Hangul Syllables (discontinued)
Hangeul Compatibility Jamo (only modern Hangeul for now)
Katakana
Katakana Phonetic Extensions
Kana Supplement (only Katakana)
Kana Extended A (only Katakana)
Kana Extended B
Small Kana Extensions (only Katakana)
Bopomofo
Bopomofo Extended
Yijing Hexagram Symbols
Vertical Forms
Small Form Variants
Tai Xuan Jing Symbols
Counting Rod Numerals
Enclosed CJK Letters and Months (Only Jamo & Syllables) (incomplete)
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Combining Diacritical Marks
Combining Diacritical Marks Supplement
Combining Diacritical Marks Extended
Combining Diacritical Marks for Symbols
Combining Half Marks
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General Punctuation
Supplemental Punctuation
Alphabetic Presentation Forms
Emoticons
Miscellaneous Symbols (discontinued)
Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs (discontinued)
Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs (only face emojis)
Symbols and Pictographs extended A (only face emojis)
Ornamental Dingbats
Dingbats
Miscellaneous Technical
Currency Symbols
Letterlike Symbols
Arrows
Supplemental Arrows A
Supplemental Arrows B
Supplemental Arrows C
Miscellaneous Symbols and Arrows (non-astrological)
Block Elements
Box Drawings
Geometric Shapes
Geometric Shapes Extended
Superscripts and Subscripts
Enclosed Alphanumeric
Enclosed Alphanumeric Supplement
Control Pictures
Optical Character Recognition
Braille Patterns
Number Forms
Domino Tiles
Common Indic Number Forms
Mayan Numerals
Kaktovik Numerals
Musical Symbols (excl. Iranian, Kievan, and Gregorian notation)
Ancient Greek Musical Notation
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Planned in the future:
Enclosed CJK Letters and Months?
CJK Symbols and Punctuation?
Mathematical Operators?
Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-A?
Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-B?
Supplemental Mathematical Operators?
Osmanya
Warang Citi
Pau Cin Hau
Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong
Symbols for Legacy Computing
Ancient Greek Music Notation
Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms (Hangul)
Hangul Jamo (full)
Hangul compatibility Jamo (full)
Hangul Jamo Extended-A?
Hangul Jamo Extended-B?
This is a font I made that's inspired by the minuscule form of the insular script used by the Anglo-Saxons in Medieval England. It includes all of the special medieval characters, and features the character "wynn (Ƿ)" as the letter "W". Happy Typing! :-)
Links:
RUNE GUIDE
Runes are used phonetically, so most of the time you should shorten double-letters to single-letters ("Hello" would become "helo"). All the appropriate runes are bound to the appropriate keys, so you can type freely without worrying about which rune you're using. However, a few runes which represent diphthongs which are unused in Modern English are bound to the SHIFT-number row. They are as follows: !-th, @-eo, #-ng, $-ɶ, %-æ, ^-ia/io, &-ea, *-kk. (-st. Additionally, in Old English, there are two types of "g"s, a soft "g" (which is bound to the "g" key), as in "sage", and a hard "g" (which is bound to the ")" key), as in "saga".
Keys 1-7 also include the different Roman numerals (I, V, X, L, C, D, M), which can be combined to make up a number (from what I can tell, the Anglo-Saxons probably used Roman numerals or tally marks - most likely the former).