![]() ![]() Stats: Version 4.0 2006 has 562 glyphs and no kerning pairsĮthiopic WashRa SemiBold, Ethiopic WashRa SemiBold Slant, Ethiopic WashRa Bold, and Ethiopic WashRa Bold Slant Stats: Version 4.0 2006 has 561 glyphs and no kerning pairs Stats: Version 1.0 2006 has 562 glyphs and 1 kerning pair Stats: Version 1.5 2003 has 599 glyphs and 1 kerning pair Source: Free download from Senamirmir Projects. (jiret.ttf and jiretsl from washra_fonts.zip) OpenType Layout Tables: Arabic, Armenian, Bengali, Buhid, Cyrillic, Devanagari, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Han Ideographic, Hangul, Hangul Jamo, Hebrew, Khmer, Korean, Lao, Latin, Malayalam, Mongolian, Myanmar, N'Ko, Tamil, Telugu, ThaiĮthiopia Jiret and Ethiopia Jiret Slant Support: Arabic script (Arabic, Baluchi, Kirghiz, Persian, Shahmukhi, Sindhi, Uighur, Urdu, Uzbek), Armenian, Bengali, Braille, Canadian Syllabics (all syllabaries, all characters), Cherokee, Chinese (Bopomofo only, including Extended), Cirth, Coptic, Cyrillic (all or most of range), Devanagari, Ethiopic (including supplement and extended blocks), Ewellic, Georgian (Mkhedruli and Asomtavruli), Greek (including polytonic and Coptic characters), Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Hebrew, IPA, Japanese (Hiragana, Katakana, Kanji/Han Ideographs including Extension A), Klingon, Korean (Hangul only), Lao, Latin, Limbu, Mongolian, N'Ko, Ogham, Phaistos, Runic, Syriac, Tamil, Telugu, Tengwar, Thaana, Thai, Tifinagh, Vietnamese, Yi Stats: Version 1.16 has 61,864 glyphs and 239 kerning pairs Source: Download this shareware font ($5) from James Kass's webpage. Source: Professional font available for purchase from Linguist's Software. OpenType Layout Tables: default (default, Amharic), Ethiopic (default, Amharic) Support: Ethiopic (including supplement and extended blocks), Latin Stats: Version 1.000 has 2,302 glyphs and 288 kerning pairs Note: The font has additional characters in the Private Use Area to support languages that require Ethiopic characters not yet encoded in Unicode. ![]() (Abyssinica_SIL.ttf from AbyssinicaSIL version.zip) It evolved from the script for classical Ge'ez, which is now strictly a liturgical language. The Ethiopic syllabary is used in central east Africa for Amharic, Bilen, Oromo, Tigré, Tigrinya, and other languages. WAZU JAPAN's Gallery of Unicode Fonts Ethiopic ![]()
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