As any Slovak should tell you, the preferred form of upper-case L-caron is the one with the apostrophe...
James *************************************** James Partridge St Edmund Hall Oxford University *************************************** ----- Original Message ----- From: "Geoffrey Waigh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Darren Morby" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Tuesday, October 23, 2001 8:54 PM Subject: Re: Letters d L l and t with caron > On Tue, 23 Oct 2001, Darren Morby wrote: > > > In The Unicode Standard Version 3.0, the Latin small letters d l and t with > > caron (U+010F, U+013E, U+0165) are actually shown with a trailing apostrophe > > (d', l', t'). On each character there is the following note: > > > > the form using apostrophe is preferred in typesetting > > > > However, the Latin capital letter L with caron (U+013D) is shown with an > > apostrophe (L') but no note. The Latin capital letters D and T with caron > > (U+010E, U+0164) show proper carons and notes that the preferred form is > > with a caron (hacek). > > > > Which is the preferred form, L with an actual caron or L with an apostrophe? > > And should there not be a note on capital L like there is on small l? (The > > note on small l does not say that it applies to capital L also.) > >