Ted Hopp scripsit:

> On Thursday, July 31, 2003 5:18 PM, John Cowan wrote:
> > Is not U+FB35 HEBREW LETTER VAV WITH DAGESH a shuruq?
> 
> Only graphically. Different pronunciation, different names, different
> functions grammatically. Old typewriters used to have only a single key for
> the lower case letter 'l' and the digit '1'. (Change your font if you can't
> see the difference.) Sometimes, Unicode is an old typewriter.

Well, hardly.  The 1 and l were squeezed onto the same key on the
typewriter because there weren't enough keys, but in handwriting and
book fonts they have always been different.  Whereas AFAIK the geminated
vav and the shuruq have always looked the same, like English consonantal
"y" and vowel "y".

-- 
John Cowan   <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
"One time I called in to the central system and started working on a big
thick 'sed' and 'awk' heavy duty data bashing script.  One of the geologists
came by, looked over my shoulder and said 'Oh, that happens to me too.
Try hanging up and phoning in again.'"  --Beverly Erlebacher

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