> All characters are now mapped to Unicoe characters or character
sequences
> where I felt that this was possible. If there are obvioous errors,
please
> point them out and I'll update the listing.
>
> However, there are some unidentified characters, or ones that could be
> considered missing from Unicode  4.0, or which have mappings that for
one
> or the other reason could be considered not ideal. These have been
> highlighted. I welcome suggestions for additions to or subtractions
from
> this list, plus any help anyone could provide in identifying the
characters
> or in locating places they are used.

Your F725 Unknown-2, to me, looks like a German SCRIPT CAPITAL S,
(compare with U+2112;SCRIPT CAPITAL L). Yes, we were taught to write an
S like this in school. Perhaps it's used somewhere in mathematics?

Your F7AA Unknown-8 could then be a SCRIPT CAPITAL C.

Your F747, spacing left hook below - doesn't it look very much like the
palatalization hooks used elsewhere in the list (which you mapped to
U+0321)?

Your combinations "with latin small letter dotless i" (e.g. F704, F731,
F77A) seem to be designed for use in phonetic transcriptions, and hence
are probably intended as IPA U+026A;LATIN LETTER SMALL CAPITAL I

F737: the description in your list doesn't match the glyph shown, which
is "with triangular colon".

F70F "Latin small letter a with colon" shows a triangular colon glyph
and should hence be mapped to U+02D0, not U+003A.

F70E "Latin small letter a with tilde with modifier letter triangular
colon" shows a U+0251 "Latin small letter alpha" glyph.

F750 "Latin small letter i with palatalized hook below" shows an
inverted breve glyph, not a hook.

F751 "Latin small letter i with tilde with tilde" shows a macron and a
tilde

F754 and F755 "Latin small letter J with..." show i, not j glyphs.

F79B "Latin small letter S with retroflex hook below" shows not a
retroflex hook, but something more like an ogonek. A retroflex hook
should be attached to the left side of the S, not in the middle below,
and has its own precomposed IPA codepoint U+0282.

F7AC "Latin small letter u with dot below with diaeresis" shows an
acute, not a diaeresis.

Lukas



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