From: "Peter Constable" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > Shouldn't both use the same glyph > > with > > just a distinct positioning? Could it be that the undetermined vowel > > tainting > > letter be shown as a subscripted star ? > > NO!!! > > Rather than making ill-conceived suggestions for improvement based on > uninformed guesses about established conventions in a field of study > with which familiarity is limited, it is sometimes better to stick to > merely observing the usage and listening to the explanations offered, > inserting only questions as needed to fill in gaps in understanding.
OK this is the third response for this question... But I still think it would be a bad prececent for Unicode if it starts accepting some very specific notational systems used in a fonted document written with a author's own choice, where subscripts/superscripts/italics would be used only in relation with author's specific notation (are we sure it is even coherent in the document itself?) So unless there's a community agreement written as a formal standard where the character would be displayed and explained for being referenced in other documents using it, I see little value in encoding such characters. Else we'll see lots of requests to encode subscripts/superscripts/italics/bolds/cursive forms of almost all existing characters of popular scripts like Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Hebrew and why not Hiragana, Katakana, Han, Hangul, Arabic, and almost all other existing scripts for their localized technical notational systems which do certainly exist in many existing printed books and publications, either for linguistic usage, or other technical domains.