The link did not pass : http://nkoinstitute.com/nko-alphabet/
2015-02-02 19:54 GMT+01:00 Philippe Verdy <verd...@wanadoo.fr>: > On this page > > the N'ko Institute hesitates ans uses U+2018 (‘) in English i.e. the > reverse direction. > It has advantages that it is used immediately after letter N/n and if ever > it appears at end of words, it won't match a pair of single quotation marks > (U+2018 is a punctuation only at start of lines, or after whitespaces and > punctuations; U+2019 is not always a quotation punctuation after a letter, > even if it's followed by whitespace or punctuation, it may also be an > orthographic apostrophe). > > > 2015-02-02 19:14 GMT+01:00 Andrew Glass (WINDOWS) < > andrew.gl...@microsoft.com>: > >> For what it's worth, the N'ko Institute of America uses U+2019. But that >> is probably a reflection of the font situation and the fact that U+2019 is >> often more accessible in word processors. >> >> http://nkoinstitute.com/the-n-character/ >> >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Unicode [mailto:unicode-boun...@unicode.org] On Behalf Of >> Christopher Fynn >> Sent: Sunday, February 1, 2015 10:13 PM >> To: Doug Ewell >> Cc: Markus Scherer; unicode@unicode.org >> Subject: Re: N'Ko - which character? 02BC vs. 2019 >> >> If used as characters that are part of a word, especially when they occur >> at the beginning or end of a word, ASCII apostrophes and and both right and >> left quotation marks easily get changed to something else by the auto >> quotes features of word-processors. >> _______________________________________________ >> Unicode mailing list >> Unicode@unicode.org >> http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Unicode mailing list >> Unicode@unicode.org >> http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode >> > >
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