RE: Hangul: Middle Korean

2012-04-19 Thread Peter Constable
From: unicode-bou...@unicode.org [mailto:unicode-bou...@unicode.org] On Behalf Of Ben Monroe > Please advise on appropriate encoding method and display options. > I am using a Windows 7 system. Windows 7 supports display of conjoining jamos, though not in a manner conforming to Korean standard

Re: Hangul: Middle Korean

2012-04-19 Thread James Cloos
Code2000 composes ᄆᆞᆯ and ᄀᆞᅀᆞᆶ, but I cannot speak to how aesthetic the compositions are; I'm not sufficiently familiar with how they should look to say. The initital consonant is at the upper-left corner, the final at the lower right corner and the vowel is just left of center. For example, in

Re: Hangul: Middle Korean

2012-04-18 Thread Benjamin M Scarborough
On 2012.04.19 11:28 AM, Ben Monroe wrote: > A few examples of what I am looking for: > > mol 'horse': ㅁ (m) + ㆍ(o) + ㄹ(l). > Should be stacked from top to bottom. > The vowel o (U+318D) is now obsolete. Just to point out, the jamo at U+3131 to U+318E are characters added for compatibility with

Hangul: Middle Korean

2012-04-18 Thread Ben Monroe
Greetings. I have a need to input Middle Korean hangul. While individual consonants and vowels are encoded, Modern Korean is typically encoded in pre-composed form. For Middle Korean, I cannot find pre-composed consonants. Should it be encoded as individual consonants / vowels? And if so, could so