On Tue, 2003-06-17 at 13:25, Richard Grubb wrote: > > The names of the letters you are looking for are pronounced "yah" and > "zhuh" (as in the word pleasure).
Exactly, that's it! These are just my method of > approximating the sound of these letter's names in English. The unicode > names are "Cyrillic capital letter zhe" and "Cyrillic capital letter ya". > In Cyrillic, the names of course are written as just the letters > themselves. > > I don't understand where you are getting the other Cyrillic letters. Are > you trying to approximate them with roman/english letters? Or are you > using a Cyrillic font? I did use a Cyrillic font indeed, but inside that font, I could not find yet the characters corresponding with 'zhuh' and 'yah'. :) What I did was make a lyric with all characters a - z, both in capital as in small, once printing them using \property LyricsVoice . LyricText \override #'font-name = #"cmr12" which gives the roman fonts, and once with \property LyricsVoice . LyricText \override #'font-name = #"wncyr10" which I then had to magnify by 1.2 because the wncyr12 isn't there. Only, as I said, the 'yah' and 'zhuh' didn't come out using this method. Various accented chars give error messages, others gives garbage. But I have the feeling that I didn't explore the full character set yet with this method, so maybe they are somewhere inside the font, but I just don't seen to be able to find them. Thanks, arie > On Tuesday, June 17, 2003, at 04:00 AM, ario wrote: > > > And does one know where I can get the Cyrillic R, mirrorred about its > > vertical axis, and this character which resembles most the 'X', but with > > some more small lines? (sorry, I don't know the name of it). > > > > thanks, > > arie > _______________________________________________ Lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user