It is legitimate to add characters for Armenian dialectology, and if you can provide additional evidence of usage in lexicography and (if possible) in other literature, we can see if a proposal can be made.
We may do this offline so as to save the list from to many files. I look forward to hearing from you. Nothing will happen, though, without further information. Michael > On 5 Oct 2017, at 06:09, via Unicode <unicode@unicode.org> wrote: > > Thank you for your reply. > I am currently handling technical support to publish in multi-language. > > This was found when we were handling a project on the Karabakh language. > I was informed that Karabakh has a dictionary containing over 40,000 words > that was produced in 2013 which employs the three characters. > I personally have not seen this dictionary, but it seems that are ones that > need these characters. > So I decided to make a post. > > Kazunari Tsuboi > > -----Original Message----- > From: Michael Everson [mailto:ever...@evertype.com] > Sent: Wednesday, October 4, 2017 11:31 PM > To: Tsuboi, Kazunari > Cc: unicode Unicode Discussion > Subject: Re: Question about Karabakh Characters > > They are not encoded, but that example is not sufficient. If you’d like to > contact me offline we can discuss this further. > > Michael Everson > >> On 4 Oct 2017, at 08:39, via Unicode <unicode@unicode.org> wrote: >> >> Hi there, >> >> The Karabakh language uses Armenian characters, but the following >> characters do not have a Unicode assigned. (image1.JPG attached) They >> are pronounced “Yi”, “Ini” and “Eh” and used with several >> combinations. (Image2.JPG attached) >> >> Is there any reason these characters are not supported by Unicode? >> I would appreciate any related information. >> >> Thank you! >> >> Kazunari Tsuboi >> <image1.jpg><image2.jpg> > >