Cherokee Supplement
Cherokee Supplement is a Unicode block containing the syllabic characters for writing the Cherokee language. When Cherokee was first added to Unicode in version 3.0 it was treated as a unicameral alphabet, but in version 8.0 it was redefined as a bicameral script. The Cherokee Supplement block contains lowercase letters only, whereas the Cherokee block contains all the uppercase letters, together with six lowercase letters.
Cherokee Supplement[1] Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) | ||||||||||||||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
U+AB7x | ꭰ | ꭱ | ꭲ | ꭳ | ꭴ | ꭵ | ꭶ | ꭷ | ꭸ | ꭹ | ꭺ | ꭻ | ꭼ | ꭽ | ꭾ | ꭿ |
U+AB8x | ꮀ | ꮁ | ꮂ | ꮃ | ꮄ | ꮅ | ꮆ | ꮇ | ꮈ | ꮉ | ꮊ | ꮋ | ꮌ | ꮍ | ꮎ | ꮏ |
U+AB9x | ꮐ | ꮑ | ꮒ | ꮓ | ꮔ | ꮕ | ꮖ | ꮗ | ꮘ | ꮙ | ꮚ | ꮛ | ꮜ | ꮝ | ꮞ | ꮟ |
U+ABAx | ꮠ | ꮡ | ꮢ | ꮣ | ꮤ | ꮥ | ꮦ | ꮧ | ꮨ | ꮩ | ꮪ | ꮫ | ꮬ | ꮭ | ꮮ | ꮯ |
U+ABBx | ꮰ | ꮱ | ꮲ | ꮳ | ꮴ | ꮵ | ꮶ | ꮷ | ꮸ | ꮹ | ꮺ | ꮻ | ꮼ | ꮽ | ꮾ | ꮿ |
Notes
|
Cherokee Supplement | |
---|---|
Range | U+AB70..U+ABBF (80 code points) |
Plane | BMP |
Scripts | Cherokee |
Major alphabets | Cherokee |
Assigned | 80 code points |
Unused | 0 reserved code points |
Unicode version history | |
8.0 | 80 (+80) |
Note: [1][2] |
History
The following Unicode-related documents record the purpose and process of defining specific characters in the Cherokee Supplement block:
Version | Final code points[lower-alpha 1] | Count | L2 ID | WG2 ID | Document |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
8.0 | U+AB70..ABBF | 80 | L2/13-200 | Moore, Lisa (2013-11-18), "C.6.1", UTC #137 Minutes | |
L2/14-064R | N4537R | Everson, Michael (2014-02-25), Revised proposal for the addition of Cherokee characters | |||
L2/14-100 | Moore, Lisa (2014-05-13), "Consensus 139-C13", UTC #139 Minutes | ||||
N4553 (pdf, doc) | Umamaheswaran, V. S. (2014-09-16), "M62.07b", Minutes of WG 2 meeting 62 Adobe, San Jose, CA, USA | ||||
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References
- "Unicode character database". The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2016-07-09.
- "Enumerated Versions of The Unicode Standard". The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2016-07-09.
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