Old Hungarian | |
---|---|
Range | U+10C80..U+10CFF (128 code points) |
Plane | SMP |
Scripts | Old Hungarian |
Major alphabets | Old Hungarian |
Assigned | 108 code points |
Unused | 20 reserved code points |
Unicode version history | |
8.0 (2015) | 108 (+108) |
Unicode documentation | |
Code chart ∣ Web page | |
Note: [1] [2] |
Old Hungarian is a Unicode block containing characters used for writing the Old Hungarian alphabet, an obsolete script which was used to write Hungarian during the medieval period.
Old Hungarian [1] [2] Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) | ||||||||||||||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
U+10C8x | 𐲀 | 𐲁 | 𐲂 | 𐲃 | 𐲄 | 𐲅 | 𐲆 | 𐲇 | 𐲈 | 𐲉 | 𐲊 | 𐲋 | 𐲌 | 𐲍 | 𐲎 | 𐲏 |
U+10C9x | 𐲐 | 𐲑 | 𐲒 | 𐲓 | 𐲔 | 𐲕 | 𐲖 | 𐲗 | 𐲘 | 𐲙 | 𐲚 | 𐲛 | 𐲜 | 𐲝 | 𐲞 | 𐲟 |
U+10CAx | 𐲠 | 𐲡 | 𐲢 | 𐲣 | 𐲤 | 𐲥 | 𐲦 | 𐲧 | 𐲨 | 𐲩 | 𐲪 | 𐲫 | 𐲬 | 𐲭 | 𐲮 | 𐲯 |
U+10CBx | 𐲰 | 𐲱 | 𐲲 | |||||||||||||
U+10CCx | 𐳀 | 𐳁 | 𐳂 | 𐳃 | 𐳄 | 𐳅 | 𐳆 | 𐳇 | 𐳈 | 𐳉 | 𐳊 | 𐳋 | 𐳌 | 𐳍 | 𐳎 | 𐳏 |
U+10CDx | 𐳐 | 𐳑 | 𐳒 | 𐳓 | 𐳔 | 𐳕 | 𐳖 | 𐳗 | 𐳘 | 𐳙 | 𐳚 | 𐳛 | 𐳜 | 𐳝 | 𐳞 | 𐳟 |
U+10CEx | 𐳠 | 𐳡 | 𐳢 | 𐳣 | 𐳤 | 𐳥 | 𐳦 | 𐳧 | 𐳨 | 𐳩 | 𐳪 | 𐳫 | 𐳬 | 𐳭 | 𐳮 | 𐳯 |
U+10CFx | 𐳰 | 𐳱 | 𐳲 | 𐳺 | 𐳻 | 𐳼 | 𐳽 | 𐳾 | 𐳿 | |||||||
Notes |
The following Unicode-related documents record the purpose and process of defining specific characters in the Old Hungarian block:
Version | Final code points [lower-alpha 1] | Count | L2 ID | WG2 ID | Document |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
8.0 | U+10C80..10CB2, 10CC0..10CF2, 10CFA..10CFF | 108 | L2/98-033 | N1686 | Everson, Michael (1998-01-18), Draft proposal to encode Old Hungarian in Plane 1 of ISO/IEC 10646 |
L2/98-220 | N1758 | Everson, Michael (1998-05-02), On encoding the Old Hungarian rovásírás in the UCS | |||
L2/98-286 | N1703 | Umamaheswaran, V. S.; Ksar, Mike (1998-07-02), "8.19", Unconfirmed Meeting Minutes, WG 2 Meeting #34, Redmond, WA, USA; 1998-03-16--20 | |||
L2/99-010 | N1903 (pdf, html, doc) | Umamaheswaran, V. S. (1998-12-30), "8.2.9", Minutes of WG 2 meeting 35, London, U.K.; 1998-09-21--25 | |||
L2/08-268 | N3483 | Everson, Michael; Szelp, André Szabolcs (2008-08-04), Preliminary proposal for encoding the Old Hungarian script in the UCS | |||
L2/08-353 | N3526 | Bakonyi, Gábor (2008-09-30), Hungarian Native Writing Draft Proposal | |||
L2/08-354 | N3527 | Hosszú, Gábor (2008-09-30), Proposal for encoding the Szekler-Hungarian Rovas in the BMP and the SMP of the UCS | |||
L2/08-356 | N3531 | Everson, Michael; Szelp, André Szabolcs (2008-10-12), Revised proposal for encoding the Old Hungarian script in the UCS | |||
L2/08-355 | N3532 | Everson, Michael (2008-11-02), Mapping between Old Hungarian proposals in N3531, N3527, and N3526 | |||
L2/09-059R | N3566R | Bakonyi, Gábor (2009-02-05), Hungarian Native Writing Proposal | |||
L2/09-092 | Bakonyi, Gábor (2009-02-23), Distinct Close "Ë" Letter in the Native Hungarian Text Named Rudimenta? Working document about Fig.8. of N3483 | ||||
L2/09-093 | Bakonyi, Gábor (2009-02-23), Code Collissions [sic] in the Proposal of Michael Everson! Working document with error samples from N3532 | ||||
L2/09-142 | N3615 | Everson, Michael; Szelp, André Szabolcs (2009-04-16), Second revised proposal for encoding the Old Hungarian script in the UCS | |||
N3634 | Pentzlin, Karl (2009-04-21), Towards an Encoding of Old Hungarian – Comments on N3527 and N3615 | ||||
L2/09-165 | N3637 | Anderson, Deborah (2009-04-22), Outstanding Issues on Old Hungarian/Szekler-Hungarian Rovas/Hungarian Native Writing | |||
L2/09-168 | N3640 | Anderson, Deborah (2009-04-22), Old Hungarian/Szekler-Hungarian Rovas Ad hoc report | |||
L2/09-234 | N3603 (pdf, doc) | Umamaheswaran, V. S. (2009-07-08), "M54.17", Unconfirmed minutes of WG 2 meeting 54 | |||
L2/09-240 | N3664 | Everson, Michael; Szelp, André Szabolcs (2009-07-23), Proposal for encoding generic punctuation used with the Hungarian Runic script | |||
L2/09-333 | N3697 | Everson, Michael; Szelp, André Szabolcs (2009-10-14), Proposal for encoding the Hungarian Runic script | |||
L2/09-399 | Bakonyi, Gábor (2009-10-30), CODE COLLISSIONS IN THE PROPOSAL OF MICHAEL EVERSON! Working document with error samples from N3532-N3697 | ||||
L2/09-400 | Bakonyi, Gábor (2009-10-30), Distinct Close "Ë" Letter in the Native Hungarian Text Named Rudimenta? | ||||
L2/11-087 | N4007 | Revised proposal for encoding the Szekely-Hungarian Rovas script in the SMP of the UCS, 2011-01-21 | |||
L2/11-088 | N4006 | Revised proposal for encoding the Carpathian Basin Rovas script in the SMP of the UCS, 2011-01-21 | |||
L2/11-089 | N3999 | Revised proposal for encoding the Khazarian Rovas script in the SMP of the UCS, 2011-01-21 | |||
L2/11-177 | N4064 | Anderson, Deborah (2011-05-07), Comparison of Hungarian Runic and Szekely-Hungarian Rovas proposals | |||
L2/11-165 | N4042 | Everson, Michael (2011-05-08), Mapping between Hungarian Runic proposals in N3697 and N4007 | |||
L2/11-207 | N4055 | Hosszú, Gábor (2011-05-15), Notes on the Szekely-Hungarian Rovas script | |||
N4076 | Comments on encoding the Rovas scripts, 2011-05-22 | ||||
L2/11-226 | N4080 | Issues of encoding the Rovas scripts, 2011-05-25 | |||
L2/11-242R | N4110R | Hungarian Runic/Sekely-Hungarian Rovas Ad-hoc Report, 2011-06-08 | |||
N4120 | Hosszú, Gábor (2011-07-05), Response to the Ad-hoc Report N4110 about the Rovas scripts | ||||
L2/11-261R2 | Moore, Lisa (2011-08-16), "Consensus 128-C37", UTC #128 / L2 #225 Minutes | ||||
L2/11-337 | Hosszú, Gábor (2011-09-12), Letter regarding Old Hungarian | ||||
L2/11-342 | Umamaheswaran, V. S. (2011-09-19), Feedback on current Old Hungarian Script in Unicode / 10646 | ||||
N4144 | Hosszú, Gábor (2011-10-12), Revised proposal for encoding the Carpathian Basin Rovas script in the SMP of the UCS | ||||
N4145 | Hosszú, Gábor (2011-10-12), Revised proposal for encoding the Khazarian Rovas script in the SMP of the UCS | ||||
N4103 | "11.3 Hungarian Runic/Szekely-Hungarian Rovas", Unconfirmed minutes of WG 2 meeting 58, 2012-01-03 | ||||
L2/12-014 | N4183 | Hosszú, Gábor (2012-01-11), Revised proposal for encoding the Szekely-Hungarian Rovas, Carpathian Basin Rovas and Khazarian Rovas scripts into the Rovas block in the SMP of the UCS | |||
L2/12-036 | N4196 | Code chart fonts for Old Hungarian, 2012-01-28 | |||
L2/12-037 | N4197 | Szelp, André Szabolcs (2012-01-30), Remarks on Old Hungarian and other scripts with regard to N4183 | |||
L2/12-070 | N4222 | Hosszú, Gábor (2012-02-02), Response to the N4197 about the Rovas scripts | |||
L2/12-073 | N4225 | Rumi, Tamás (2012-02-04), Proposal for encoding pre-combined and extended Rovas numerals into the Rovas block in the SMP of the UCS | |||
N4224 | Sípos, László (2012-02-05), The contemporary Rovas usage and Rovas user community representation | ||||
N4227 | Hosszú, Gábor (2012-02-06), Code chart font for Rovas block | ||||
L2/12-088 | N4232 | Róna-Tas, András (2012-02-09), Letter re Hungarian | |||
L2/12-089 | N4224-A | Sípos, László (2012-02-10), Stand points of the user community, stake holders regarding to encoding Rovas scripts | |||
N4237 | Hosszú, Gábor (2012-02-12), Response to the contribution N4232 about the Rovas scripts | ||||
L2/12-189 | N4267 | Szondi, Miklós (2012-05-08), Declaration of Support for the Advancement of the Encoding of the old Hungarian Script | |||
N4274 | Somfai, Tamás (2012-05-25), Contemporary Rovas in the word processing | ||||
L2/12-220 | Rumi, Tamás; Rózsa, György (2012-06-08), Letter from Mandorla Public Education Association | ||||
L2/12-218 | Deák, Dezső (2012-06-26), Specifying request/proposal before encoding the Szekely-Hungarian Rovas in the UCS | ||||
L2/12-219 | N4288 | Rumi, Tamás (2012-06-26), Minutes of the Rovas Working Group | |||
N4253 (pdf, doc) | "M59.01b", Unconfirmed minutes of WG 2 meeting 59, 2012-09-12 | ||||
L2/12-168 | N4268R | Everson, Michael; Szelp, André Szabolcs (2012-10-02), Consolidated proposal for encoding the Old Hungarian script in the UCS | |||
L2/12-331 | N4367 | Demeczky, Jenő; Hosszú, Gábor; Rumi, Tamás; Sípos, László; Zelliger, Erzsébet (2012-10-14), Revised proposal for encoding the Rovas in the UCS | |||
L2/12-332 | N4371 | Demeczky, Jenő; Giczi, György; Hosszú, Gábor; Kliha, Gergely; Obrusánszky, Borbála; Rumi, Tamás; Sípos, László; Zelliger, Erzsébet (2012-10-21), Additional information about the name of the Rovas script | |||
N4373 | Gyetvay, György Gergely (2012-10-22), Resolutions of the 8th Hungarian World Congress on the encoding of Old Hungarian | ||||
L2/12-337 | Demeczky, Jenő; Giczi, György; Hosszú, Gábor; Kliha, Gergely; Obrusánszky, Borbála; Rumi, Tamás; Sípos, László; Zelliger, Erzsébet (2012-10-24), About the consensus of the Rovas encoding - Response to N4373 | ||||
L2/12-334 | N4374R | Everson, Michael (2012-11-12), Old Hungarian/Szekely-Hungarian Rovas Ad-hoc Report | |||
L2/12-343R2 | Moore, Lisa (2012-12-04), "Consensus 133-C6, 133-C7", UTC #133 Minutes | ||||
L2/13-028 | Anderson, Deborah; McGowan, Rick; Whistler, Ken; Pournader, Roozbeh (2013-01-28), "14", Recommendations to UTC on Script Proposals | ||||
L2/13-049 | N4422 | Demeczky, Jenő; Ivanyos, Lajos; Hosszú, Gábor; Rumi, Tamás; Sípos, László; Zelliger, Erzsébet (2013-03-07), Declaration for removing the "Hungarian" block from DAM | |||
N4420 | Szondi, Miklós (2013-05-05), Declaration in support of the encoding of Hungarian | ||||
N4353 (pdf, doc) | "M60.05a", Unconfirmed minutes of WG 2 meeting 60, 2013-05-23 | ||||
L2/13-132 | Moore, Lisa (2013-07-29), "Consensus 136-C13", UTC #136 Minutes, Change the script, block, and character names of "Hungarian" to "Old Hungarian". | ||||
L2/13-218 | N4492 | Demeczky, Jenő; Ivanyos, Lajos; Hosszú, Gábor; Rumi, Tamás; Sípos, László; Somfai, Tamás; Zelliger, Erzsébet (2013-10-26), Declaration for removing the "Old Hungarian" block from DAM | |||
N4403 (pdf, doc) | Umamaheswaran, V. S. (2014-01-28), "Resolution M61.01 and M61.02 item a", Unconfirmed minutes of WG 2 meeting 61, Holiday Inn, Vilnius, Lithuania; 2013-06-10/14 | ||||
|
Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols is a Unicode block comprising styled forms of Latin and Greek letters and decimal digits that enable mathematicians to denote different notions with different letter styles. The letters in various fonts often have specific, fixed meanings in particular areas of mathematics. By providing uniformity over numerous mathematical articles and books, these conventions help to read mathematical formulas. These also may be used to differentiate between concepts that share a letter in a single problem.
In Unicode, a Private Use Area (PUA) is a range of code points that, by definition, will not be assigned characters by the Unicode Consortium. Three private use areas are defined: one in the Basic Multilingual Plane, and one each in, and nearly covering, planes 15 and 16. The code points in these areas cannot be considered as standardized characters in Unicode itself. They are intentionally left undefined so that third parties may define their own characters without conflicting with Unicode Consortium assignments. Under the Unicode Stability Policy, the Private Use Areas will remain allocated for that purpose in all future Unicode versions.
Geometric Shapes is a Unicode block of 96 symbols at code point range U+25A0–25FF.
Letterlike Symbols is a Unicode block containing 80 characters which are constructed mainly from the glyphs of one or more letters. In addition to this block, Unicode includes full styled mathematical alphabets, although Unicode does not explicitly categorize these characters as being "letterlike."
Phonetic Extensions is a Unicode block containing phonetic characters used in the Uralic Phonetic Alphabet, Old Irish phonetic notation, the Oxford English Dictionary and American dictionaries, and Americanist and Russianist phonetic notations. Its character set is continued in the following Unicode block, Phonetic Extensions Supplement.
Block Elements is a Unicode block containing square block symbols of various fill and shading. Used along with block elements are box-drawing characters, shade characters, and terminal graphic characters. These can be used for filling regions of the screen and portraying drop shadows. Its block name in Unicode 1.0 was Blocks.
Specials is a short Unicode block of characters allocated at the very end of the Basic Multilingual Plane, at U+FFF0–FFFF. Of these 16 code points, five have been assigned since Unicode 3.0:
Cyrillic Extended-A is a Unicode block containing Cyrillic combining characters used in Old Church Slavonic texts.
Cyrillic Extended-B is a Unicode block containing Cyrillic characters for writing Old Cyrillic and Old Abkhazian, and combining numeric signs for Cyrillic numerals used in early Slavic or Church Slavonic texts.
Enclosed Alphanumerics is a Unicode block of typographical symbols of an alphanumeric within a circle, a bracket or other not-closed enclosure, or ending in a full stop.
In Unicode, the block Old Turkic is located from U+10C00 to U+10C4F. It is used to display the Old Turkic alphabet.
CJK Symbols and Punctuation is a Unicode block containing symbols and punctuation used for writing the Chinese, Japanese and Korean languages. It also contains one Chinese character.
Enclosed Alphanumeric Supplement is a Unicode block consisting of Latin alphabet characters and Arabic numerals enclosed in circles, ovals or boxes, used for a variety of purposes. It is encoded in the range U+1F100–U+1F1FF in the Supplementary Multilingual Plane.
Arabic Presentation Forms-A is a Unicode block encoding contextual forms and ligatures of letter variants needed for Persian, Urdu, Sindhi and Central Asian languages. This block also allocates 32 noncharacters in Unicode, designed specifically for internal use.
Arabic Presentation Forms-B is a Unicode block encoding spacing forms of Arabic diacritics, and contextual letter forms. The special codepoint ZWNBSP is also here, which is only meant for a byte order mark. The block name in Unicode 1.0 was Basic Glyphs for Arabic Language; its characters were re-ordered in the process of merging with ISO 10646 in Unicode 1.0.1 and 1.1.
Tibetan is a Unicode block containing characters for the Tibetan, Dzongkha, and other languages of China, Bhutan, Nepal, Mongolia, northern India, eastern Pakistan and Russia.
Variation Selectors Supplement is a Unicode block containing additional variation selectors beyond those found in the Variation Selectors block.
Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms is the name of a Unicode block U+FF00–FFEF, provided so that older encodings containing both halfwidth and fullwidth characters can have lossless translation to/from Unicode. It is the second-to-last block of the Basic Multilingual Plane, followed only by the short Specials block at U+FFF0–FFFF. Its block name in Unicode 1.0 was Halfwidth and Fullwidth Variants.
Old Sogdian is a Unicode block containing characters for a group of related, non-cursive Sogdian writing systems used to write historic Sogdian in the 3rd to 5th centuries CE.
Symbols for Legacy Computing is a Unicode block containing graphic characters that were used for various home computers from the 1970s and 1980s and in Teletext broadcasting standards. It includes characters from the Amstrad CPC, MSX, Mattel Aquarius, RISC OS, MouseText, Atari ST, TRS-80 Color Computer, Oric, Texas Instruments TI-99/4A, TRS-80, Minitel, Teletext, ATASCII, PETSCII, ZX80, and ZX81 character sets. Semigraphics characters are also included in the form of new block-shaped characters, line-drawing characters, and 60 "sextant" characters.