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Unicode subscripts and superscripts

Unicode has subscripted and superscripted versions of a number of characters including a full set of Arabic numerals.[1] These characters allow any polynomial, chemical and certain other equations to be represented in plain text without using any form of markup like HTML or TeX.

The difference between superscript/subscript and numerator/denominator glyphs. In many popular fonts the Unicode "superscript" and "subscript" characters are actually numerator and denominator glyphs.

The World Wide Web Consortium and the Unicode Consortium have made recommendations on the choice between using markup and using superscript and subscript characters:

When used in mathematical context (MathML) it is recommended to consistently use style markup for superscripts and subscripts […] However, when super and sub-scripts are to reflect semantic distinctions, it is easier to work with these meanings encoded in text rather than markup, for example, in phonetic or phonemic transcription.[2]

Uses edit

The intended use[2] when these characters were added to Unicode was to produce true superscripts and subscripts so that chemical and algebraic formulas could be written without markup. Thus "H₂O" (using a subscript 2 character) is supposed to be identical to "H2O" (with subscript markup).

In reality, many fonts that include these characters ignore the Unicode definition, and instead design the digits for mathematical numerator and denominator glyphs,[3][4] which are aligned with the cap line and the baseline, respectively. When used with the solidus, these glyphs are a common substitute for diagonal fractions, such as ³/₄ for the ¾ glyph. This change was made because using markup does not give a good graphic approximation of fractions (compare markup 3/4 with super/sub-script ³/₄). The change also makes the superscript letters useful for ordinal indicators, more closely matching the ª and º characters. However, it makes them incorrect for normal superscript and subscript, and so chemical and algebraic formulas are better rendered by using markup.

Unicode intended that diagonal fractions be rendered by a different mechanism: the fraction slash U+2044 is visually similar to the solidus, but when used with the ordinary digits (not the superscripts and subscripts), it instructs the layout system that a fraction such as ¾ is to be rendered using automatic glyph substitution.[5][a] User-end support was quite poor for a number of years, but browsers[b] and fonts increasingly support the intended Unicode behavior. A selection of supporting fonts is displayed in the table below. (These will not display properly if you do not have the fonts installed, or if your browser does not support this behavior.)

Comparison of encodings of simple fractions
Font U+00BD VULGAR FRACTION ONE HALF U+0031 DIGIT ONE U+2044 FRACTION SLASH U+0032 DIGIT TWO
Browser default font ½ 1⁄2
Andika ½ 1⁄2
Arno Pro ½ 1⁄2
URW Bookman ½ 1⁄2
Brill ½ 1⁄2
Brioso Pro ½ 1⁄2
Calibri ½ 1⁄2
Candara ½ 1⁄2
Carlito ½ 1⁄2
Cantarell ½ 1⁄2
FiraGO ½ 1⁄2
EB Garamond ½ 1⁄2
Gentium Book ½ 1⁄2
URW Gothic ½ 1⁄2
Lato ½ 1⁄2
Linux Libertine ½ 1⁄2
Nimbus Roman ½ 1⁄2
Nimbus Sans ½ 1⁄2
Noto Sans ½ 1⁄2
Noto Serif ½ 1⁄2
Open Sans ½ 1⁄2
Ubuntu ½ 1⁄2
Yrsa ½ 1⁄2

Superscripts and subscripts block edit

The most common superscript digits (1, 2, and 3) were in ISO-8859-1 and were therefore carried over into those positions in the Latin-1 range of Unicode. The rest were placed in a dedicated section of Unicode at U+2070 to U+209F. The two tables below show these characters. Each superscript or subscript character is preceded by a normal x to show the subscripting/superscripting. The table on the left contains the actual Unicode characters; the one on the right contains the equivalents using HTML markup for the subscript or superscript.

Unicode characters
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+00Bx
U+207x x⁰ xⁱ x⁴ x⁵ x⁶ x⁷ x⁸ x⁹ x⁺ x⁻ x⁼ x⁽ x⁾ xⁿ
U+208x x₀ x₁ x₂ x₃ x₄ x₅ x₆ x₇ x₈ x₉ x₊ x₋ x₌ x₍ x₎
U+209x xₐ xₑ xₒ xₓ xₔ xₕ xₖ xₗ xₘ xₙ xₚ xₛ xₜ
Simulated using <sup> or <sub> tags
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+00Bx x2 x3 x1
U+207x x0 xi x4 x5 x6 x7 x8 x9 x+ x x= x( x) xn
U+208x x0 x1 x2 x3 x4 x5 x6 x7 x8 x9 x+ x x= x( x)
U+209x xa xe xo xx xə xh xk xl xm xn xp xs xt
  Reserved for future use.
  Other characters from Latin-1 not related to super- or sub-scripts.

Other superscript and subscript characters edit

Unicode version 15.1 also includes subscript and superscript characters that are intended for semantic usage, in the following blocks:[1][6]

Superscript
  • The Latin-1 Supplement block contains the feminine and masculine ordinal indicators ª and º.
  • The Latin Extended-C block contains one superscript, ⱽ.
  • The Latin Extended-D block contains six superscripts: ꝰ ꟲ ꟳ ꟴ ꟸ ꟹ.
  • The Latin Extended-E block contains five superscripts: ꭜ ꭝ ꭞ ꭟ ꭩ.
  • The Latin Extended-F block is entirely superscript IPA letters: 𐞁 𐞂 𐞃 𐞄 𐞅 𐞇 𐞈 𐞉 𐞊 𐞋 𐞌 𐞍 𐞎 𐞏 𐞐 𐞑 𐞒 𐞓 𐞔 𐞕 𐞖 𐞗 𐞘 𐞙 𐞚 𐞛 𐞜 𐞝 𐞞 𐞟 𐞠 𐞡 𐞢 𐞣 𐞤 𐞥 𐞦 𐞧 𐞨 𐞩 𐞪 𐞫 𐞬 𐞭 𐞮 𐞯 𐞰 𐞲 𐞳 𐞴 𐞵 𐞶 𐞷 𐞸 𐞹 𐞺.
  • The Spacing Modifier Letters block has superscripted letters and symbols used for phonetic transcription: ʰ ʱ ʲ ʳ ʴ ʵ ʶ ʷ ʸ ˀ ˁ ˠ ˡ ˢ ˣ ˤ.
  • The Phonetic Extensions block has several superscripted letters and symbols: Latin/IPA ᴬ ᴭ ᴮ ᴯ ᴰ ᴱ ᴲ ᴳ ᴴ ᴵ ᴶ ᴷ ᴸ ᴹ ᴺ ᴻ ᴼ ᴽ ᴾ ᴿ ᵀ ᵁ ᵂ ᵃ ᵄ ᵅ ᵆ ᵇ ᵈ ᵉ ᵊ ᵋ ᵌ ᵍ ᵏ ᵐ ᵑ ᵒ ᵓ ᵖ ᵗ ᵘ ᵚ ᵛ, Greek ᵝ ᵞ ᵟ ᵠ ᵡ, Cyrillic ᵸ, other ᵎ ᵔ ᵕ ᵙ ᵜ. These are intended to indicate secondary articulation.
  • The Phonetic Extensions Supplement block has several more: Latin/IPA ᶛ ᶜ ᶝ ᶞ ᶟ ᶠ ᶡ ᶢ ᶣ ᶤ ᶥ ᶦ ᶧ ᶨ ᶩ ᶪ ᶫ ᶬ ᶭ ᶮ ᶯ ᶰ ᶱ ᶲ ᶳ ᶴ ᶵ ᶶ ᶷ ᶸ ᶹ ᶺ ᶻ ᶼ ᶽ ᶾ, Greek ᶿ.
  • The Cyrillic Extended-B block contains two Cyrillic superscripts: ꚜ ꚝ.
  • The Cyrillic Extended-D block contains many Cyrillic superscripts: 𞀰 𞀱 𞀲 𞀳 𞀷 𞀵 𞀶 𞀷 𞀸 𞀹 𞀺 𞀻 𞀼 𞀽 𞀾 𞀿 𞁀 𞁁 𞁂 𞁃 𞁄 𞁅 𞁆 𞁇 𞁈 𞁉 𞁊 𞁋 𞁌 𞁍 𞁎 𞁏 𞁐 𞁫 𞁬 𞁭.
  • The Georgian block contains one superscripted Mkhedruli letter: ჼ.
  • The Kanbun block has superscripted annotation characters used in Japanese copies of Classical Chinese texts: ㆒ ㆓ ㆔ ㆕ ㆖ ㆗ ㆘ ㆙ ㆚ ㆛ ㆜ ㆝ ㆞ ㆟.
  • The Tifinagh block has one superscript letter : ⵯ.
  • The Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics and its Extended blocks contain several mostly consonant-only letters to indicate syllable coda called Finals, along with some characters that indicate syllable medial known as Medials: Main block ᐜ ᐝ ᐞ ᐟ ᐠ ᐡ ᐢ ᐣ ᐤ ᐥ ᐦ ᐧ ᐨ ᐩ ᐪ ᑉ ᑊ ᑋ ᒃ ᒄ ᒡ ᒢ ᒻ ᒼ ᒽ ᒾ ᓐ ᓑ ᓒ ᓪ ᓫ ᔅ ᔆ ᔇ ᔈ ᔉ ᔊ ᔋ ᔥ ᔾ ᔿ ᕀ ᕁ ᕐ ᕑ ᕝ ᕪ ᕻ ᕯ ᕽ ᖅ ᖕ ᖖ ᖟ ᖦ ᖮ ᗮ ᘁ ᙆ ᙇ ᙚ ᙾ ᙿ; Extended block: ᣔ ᣕ ᣖ ᣗ ᣘ ᣙ ᣚ ᣛ ᣜ ᣝ ᣞ ᣟ ᣳ ᣴ ᣵ.
Combining superscript
  • The Combining Diacritical Marks block contains medieval superscript letter diacritics. These letters are written directly above other letters appearing in medieval Germanic manuscripts, and so these glyphs do not include spacing, for example uͤ. They are shown here over the dotted circle placeholder ◌: ◌ͣ ◌ͤ ◌ͥ ◌ͦ ◌ͧ ◌ͨ ◌ͩ ◌ͪ ◌ͫ ◌ͬ ◌ͭ ◌ͮ ◌ͯ.
  • The Combining Diacritical Marks Extended block contains three combining insular letters for the Middle English Ormulum, ◌ᫌ ◌ᫍ ◌ᫎ.[7]
  • The Combining Diacritical Marks Supplement block contains additional medieval superscript letter diacritics, enough to complete the basic lowercase Latin alphabet except for j, q and y, a few small capitals and ligatures (ae, ao, av), and additional letters: ◌᷒ ◌ᷓ ◌ᷔ ◌ᷕ ◌ᷖ ◌ᷗ ◌ᷘ ◌ᷙ ◌ᷚ ◌ᷛ ◌ᷜ ◌ᷝ ◌ᷞ ◌ᷟ ◌ᷠ ◌ᷡ ◌ᷢ ◌ᷣ ◌ᷤ ◌ᷥ ◌ᷦ ◌ᷧ ◌ᷨ ◌ᷪ ◌ᷫ ◌ᷬ ◌ᷭ ◌ᷮ ◌ᷯ ◌ᷰ ◌ᷱ ◌ᷲ ◌ᷳ ◌ᷴ, Greek ◌ᷩ.
  • The Cyrillic Extended-A and -B blocks contains multiple medieval superscript letter diacritics, enough to complete the basic lowercase Cyrillic alphabet used in Church Slavonic texts, also includes an additional ligature (ст): ◌ⷠ ◌ⷡ ◌ⷢ ◌ⷣ ◌ⷤ ◌ⷥ ◌ⷦ ◌ⷧ ◌ⷨ ◌ⷩ ◌ⷪ ◌ⷫ ◌ⷬ ◌ⷭ ◌ⷮ ◌ⷯ ◌ⷰ ◌ⷱ ◌ⷲ ◌ⷳ ◌ⷴ ◌ⷵ ◌ⷶ ◌ⷷ ◌ⷸ ◌ⷹ ◌ⷺ ◌ⷻ ◌ⷼ ◌ⷽ ◌ⷾ ◌ⷿ ◌ꙴ ◌ꙵ ◌ꙶ ◌ꙷ ◌ꙸ ◌ꙹ ◌ꙺ ◌ꙻ ◌ꚞ ◌ꚟ.
  • The Cyrillic Extended-D block has one additional combining character, that being і: ◌𞂏.
Subscript
  • The Latin Extended-C block contains one subscript, ⱼ.
  • The Phonetic Extensions block has several subscripted letters and symbols: Latin/IPA ᵢ ᵣ ᵤ ᵥ and Greek ᵦ ᵧ ᵨ ᵩ ᵪ.
  • The Cyrillic Extended-D block also contains many Cyrillic subscripts: 𞁑 𞁒 𞁓 𞁔 𞁕 𞁖 𞁗 𞁘 𞁙 𞁚 𞁛 𞁜 𞁝 𞁞 𞁟 𞁠 𞁡 𞁢 𞁣 𞁤 𞁥 𞁦 𞁧 𞁨 𞁩 𞁪.
Combining subscript

Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, and IPA tables edit

Consolidated, the Unicode standard contains superscript and subscript versions of a subset of Latin, Greek and Cyrillic letters. Here they are arranged in alphabetical order for comparison (or for copy and paste convenience). Since these characters appear in different Unicode ranges, they may not appear to be the same size or position due to font substitution in the browser. Shaded cells mark small capitals that are not very distinct from minuscules, and Greek letters that are indistinguishable from Latin, and so would not be expected to be supported by Unicode.

Little punctuation is encoded. Parentheses and the exclamation mark are shown above. A question mark may be created with a superscript gelded question mark and a combining dot: ˀ̣, although some fonts do not render it properly.

Latin superscript and subscript letters
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Superscript capital ᴿ [8]
Superscript small cap 𐞄 𐞒 𐞖 𐞪 𐞲
Superscript minuscule ʰ ʲ ˡ 𐞥 ʳ ˢ ʷ ˣ ʸ
Overscript capital ◌ᷛ ◌ᷞ ◌ᷟ ◌ᷡ ◌ᷢ
Overscript minuscule ◌ͣ ◌ᷨ ◌ͨ ◌ͩ ◌ͤ ◌ᷫ ◌ᷚ ◌ͪ ◌ͥ ◌ᷜ ◌ᷝ ◌ͫ ◌ᷠ ◌ͦ ◌ᷮ ◌ͬ ◌ᷤ ◌ͭ ◌ͧ ◌ͮ ◌ᷱ ◌ͯ ◌ᷦ
Subscript minuscule
Underscript minuscule ◌᷊ ◌ᪿ
Greek superscript and subscript letters
Α Β Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ Ν Ξ Ο Π Ρ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
Superscript minuscule [A] ᶿ [A]
Overscript minuscule ◌ᷩ
Subscript minuscule
  1. ^ a b In some fonts, Latin alpha ᵅ and upsilon ᶹ can be used as superscript Greek alpha and upsilon. ᵋ and ᶥ are also officially Latin letters, but display the same as Greek.
Cyrillic superscript and subscript letters
А Ә Б В Г Ґ Д Е Є Ж З Ѕ И І Ї Ј К Л М Н О Ө П Р С Ҫ
Superscript 𞀰 𞁋 𞀱 𞀲 𞀳 𞀴 𞀵 𞀶 𞀷 𞁊 𞀸 𞁌 𞁍 𞀹 𞀺 𞀻 𞀼 𞁎 𞀽 𞀾 𞀿 𞁫
Overscript ◌ⷶ ◌ⷠ ◌ⷡ ◌ⷢ ◌ⷣ ◌ⷷ ◌ꙴ ◌ⷤ ◌ⷥ ◌ꙵ ◌𞂏 ◌ꙶ ◌ⷦ ◌ⷧ ◌ⷨ ◌ⷩ ◌ⷪ ◌ⷫ ◌ⷬ ◌ⷭ
Subscript 𞁑 𞁒 𞁓 𞁔 𞁧 𞁕 𞁖 𞁗 𞁘 𞁩 𞁙 𞁨 𞁚 𞁛 𞁜 𞁝 𞁞
Т У Ү Ұ Ф Х Ѡ Ц Ч Џ Ш Щ Ъ Ы Ь Ѣ Э Ю Ѥ Ѧ Ѫ Ѭ Ѳ Ӏ
Superscript 𞁀 𞁁 𞁏 𞁭 𞁂 𞁃 𞁄 𞁅 𞁆 𞁬 𞁇 𞁈 𞁉 𞁐
Overscript ◌ⷮ ◌ꙷ ◌ⷹ ◌ꚞ ◌ⷯ ◌ꙻ ◌ⷰ ◌ⷱ ◌ⷲ ◌ⷳ ◌ꙸ ◌ꙹ ◌ꙺ ◌ⷺ ◌ⷻ ◌ⷼ ◌ꚟ ◌ⷽ ◌ⷾ ◌ⷿ ◌ⷴ
Subscript 𞁟 𞁠 𞁡 𞁢 𞁣 𞁪 𞁤 𞁥 𞁦

Many of the Cyrillic characters were added to the Cyrillic Extended-D block, which was added to the free Gentium Plus and Andika fonts with version 6.2 in February 2023.

See also small caps in Unicode.

Superscript IPA edit

The Latin Extended-F block was created for the remaining superscript IPA letters. They were added to the free Gentium Plus and Andika fonts with version 6.2 in February 2023.

The Unicode characters for superscript (modifier) IPA and extIPA consonant letters are as follows. Characters for sounds with secondary articulation are set off in parentheses and placed below the base letters:

IPA and extIPA consonants, along with superscript variants and their Unicode code points
Bi­labial Labio­dental Dental Alveolar Post­alveolar Retro­flex Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyn­geal Glottal
Nasal m ᵐ
1D50
ɱ ᶬ
1DAC
n ⁿ
207F
ɳ ᶯ
1DAF
ɲ ᶮ
1DAE
ŋ ᵑ
1D51
ɴ ᶰ
1DB0
Plosive p ᵖ
1D56
b ᵇ
1D47
t ᵗ
1D57
d ᵈ
1D48
ʈ 𐞯
107AF
ɖ 𐞋
1078B
c ᶜ
1D9C
ɟ ᶡ
1DA1
k ᵏ
1D4F
ɡ ᶢ/g ᵍ
1DA2/1D4D
q 𐞥
107A5
ɢ 𐞒
10792
ʡ 𐞳
107B3
ʔ ˀ
02C0
Affricate ʦ 𐞬
107AC
ʣ 𐞇
10787
ʧ 𐞮
107AE
(ʨ 𐞫)
107AB
ʤ 𐞊
1078A
(ʥ 𐞉)
10789
ꭧ 𐞭
107AD
ꭦ 𐞈
10788
Fricative ɸ ᶲ
1DB2
β ᵝ
1D5D
f ᶠ
1DA0
v ᵛ
1D5B
θ ᶿ
1DBF
ð ᶞ
1D9E
s ˢ
02E2
z ᶻ
1DBB
ʃ ᶴ
1DB4
(ɕ )
1D9D
ʒ ᶾ
1DBE
(ʑ )
1DBD
ʂ ᶳ
1DB3
ʐ ᶼ
1DBC
ç ᶜ̧
1D9C + 0327[c]
ʝ ᶨ
1DA8
x ˣ
02E3
(ɧ 𐞗)
10797
ɣ ˠ
02E0
χ ᵡ
1D61
ʁ ʶ
02B6
ħ 𐞕
10795
(ʩ 𐞐)
10790
ʕ ˤ
02E4[d]
h ʰ
02B0
ɦ ʱ
02B1
Approximant ʋ ᶹ
1DB9
ɹ ʴ
02B4
ɻ ʵ
02B5
j ʲ
02B2
(ɥ ᶣ)
1DA3
 
 
(ʍ ꭩ)
AB69
ɰ ᶭ
1DAD
(w ʷ)
02B7
Tap/flap ⱱ 𐞰
107B0
ɾ 𐞩
107A9
ɽ 𐞨
107A8
Trill ʙ 𐞄
10784
r ʳ
02B3
ʀ 𐞪
107AA
ʜ 𐞖
10796
ʢ 𐞴
107B4
Lateral fricative ɬ 𐞛
1079B
(ʪ 𐞙)
10799
ɮ 𐞞
1079E
(ʫ 𐞚)
1079A
ꞎ 𐞝
1079D
𝼅 𐞟
1079F
𝼆 𐞡
107A1
𝼄 𐞜
1079C
Lateral approximant l ˡ
02E1
(ɫ ꭞ)
AB5E[e]
ɭ ᶩ
1DA9
ʎ 𐞠
107A0
ʟ ᶫ
1DAB
Lateral tap/flap ɺ 𐞦
107A6
𝼈 𐞧
107A7
Implosive ɓ 𐞅
10785
ɗ 𐞌
1078C
ᶑ 𐞍
1078D
ʄ 𐞘
10798
ɠ 𐞓
10793
ʛ 𐞔
10794
Click release[f] ʘ 𐞵
107B5
ǀ 𐞶
107B6
ʇ 𐞻
107BB
ǃ ꜝ
A71D
ʗ 𐞼
107BC
𝼊 𐞹
107B9
ψ –
(TBA)
ǂ 𐞸
107B8
𝼋 𐞾
107BE
(ʞ 𐞿)
107BF
Lateral click
release
ǁ 𐞷
107B7
ʖ 𐞽
107BD
Percussive ¡ ꜞ
A71E[g]

The spacing diacritic for ejective consonants, U+2BC, works with superscript letters despite not being superscript itself: ᵖʼ ᵗʼ ᶜʼ ᵏˣʼ. If a distinction needs to be made, the combining apostrophe U+315 may be used: ᵖ̕ ᵗ̕ ᶜ̕ ᵏˣ̕. The spacing diacritic should be used for a baseline letter with a superscript release, such as [tˢʼ] or [kˣʼ], where the scope of the apostrophe includes the non-superscript letter, but the combining apostrophe U+315 might be used to indicate a weakly articulated ejective consonant like [ᵗ̕] or [ᵏ̕], where the whole consonant is written as a superscript, or together with U+2BC when separate apostrophes have scope over the base and modifier letters, as in pʼᵏˣ̕.[9]

Spacing diacritics, as in , cannot be secondarily superscripted in plain text: ᵗʲ. (In this instance, the old IPA letter for [tʲ], ƫ, has a superscript variant in Unicode, U+1DB5 , as does the lateral, U+1DDA , but that is not generally the case.)

Among older letters, (U+A727), a graphic variant of ɮ, is supported at (U+AB5C).

The Unicode characters for superscript (modifier) IPA vowel letters, plus an extended letter found in English dictionaries, are as follows. Most recently retired alternative letters are also supported; they are set off in parentheses and placed below the standard IPA letters:

IPA vowels and superscript variants
Front Central Back
Close i ⁱ
2071
y ʸ
02B8
ɨ ᶤ
1DA4
ʉ ᶶ
1DB6
ɯ ᵚ
1D5A
u ᵘ
1D58
Near-close ɪ ᶦ
1DA6
(ɩ ᶥ)
1DA5
ʏ 𐞲
107B2


ᵻ ᶧ
1DA7


ʊ ᶷ
1DB7
(ɷ 𐞤)
107A4
Close-mid e ᵉ
1D49
ø 𐞢
107A2
ɘ 𐞎
1078E
ɵ ᶱ
1DB1
ɤ 𐞑
10791
o ᵒ
1D52
Mid ə ᵊ
1D4A
Open-mid ɛ ᵋ
1D4B
œ ꟹ
A7F9
ɜ ᶟ
1D9F
(ᴈ ᵌ)
1D4C
ɞ 𐞏
1078F
ʌ ᶺ
1DBA
ɔ ᵓ
1D53
Near-open æ 𐞃
10783
ɶ 𐞣
107A3
ɐ ᵄ
1D44
ɑ ᵅ
1D45
ɒ ᶛ
1D9B
Open a ᵃ
1D43

The precomposed Unicode rhotic vowel letters ɚ ɝ are not directly supported. The rhotic diacritic U+02DE ◌˞ should be used instead: ᵊ˞ ᶟ˞.[10]

ɜ and are reversed ɛ. The older IPA turned ɛ, , is also supported, at U+1D4C . However, the briefly resurrected vowel letter ʚ (U+029A) is not supported, only its reversed replacement ɞ is.

Among older vowels, (U+1D1C), a graphic variant of ʊ, is supported at (U+1DB8).

The two length marks are also supported:

Length marks
Long Half-long
ː 𐞁
10781
ˑ 𐞂
10782

Superscript wildcards (full caps) are partially supported: e.g. ᴺC (prenasalized consonant), ꟲN (prestopped nasal), Pꟳ (fricative release), NᴾF (epenthetic plosive), CVNᵀ (tone-bearing syllable), Cᴸ (liquid or lateral release), Cᴿ (rhotic or resonant release), Vᴳ (off-glide/diphthong), Cⱽ (fleeting vowel). Superscript S for sibilant release has preliminary approval for Unicode 17 (as ꟱); superscript for fleeting/epenthetic click does not. Other basic Latin superscript wildcards for tone and weak indeterminate sounds, as described in the article on the International Phonetic Alphabet, are mostly supported. (See table in previous section.)

In addition, a very few IPA letters beyond the basic Latin alphabet have combining forms or are supported as subscripts:

Additional IPA characters
ɑ æ ç ð ə ʃ ʍ ʔ ʼ
Overscript ◌ᷧ ◌ᷔ ◌ᷗ ◌ᷙ ◌ᷪ ◌ᷯ ◌̉[h] ◌̓
Subscript
Underscript ◌ᫀ ◌̦

Composite characters edit

Primarily for compatibility with earlier character sets, Unicode contains a number of characters that compose super- and subscripts with other symbols.[1] In most fonts these render much better than attempts to construct these symbols from the above characters or by using markup.

Notes edit

  1. ^ For a general overview and technical information on glyph substitution (though not specifically for fractions): GSUB — Glyph Substitution Table in the OpenType specification on the Microsoft Typography site.
  2. ^ Such as Chrome, Firefox and Falkon
  3. ^ Superscript ç is composed of superscript c and a combining cedilla, which should display properly in a good font. Superscript c was specifically requested for this purpose in Unicode proposal L2/03-180.
  4. ^ U+02E4 ˤ MODIFIER LETTER SMALL REVERSED GLOTTAL STOP is the superscript variant of U+0295 ʕ LATIN LETTER PHARYNGEAL VOICED FRICATIVE and is defined for IPA use. The similar character U+02C1 ˁ MODIFIER LETTER REVERSED GLOTTAL STOP is a reversed U+02C0 ˀ MODIFIER LETTER GLOTTAL STOP, perhaps a gelded reversed question mark. Fonts are inconsistent in whether they look different and what the difference is.
  5. ^ In Microsoft fonts this character was erroneously designed as a superscript .
  6. ^ Old-style click letters were approved in 2024 per IPA request. Unicode pipeline: Latin modifier letters for clicks
  7. ^ U+A71D and A71E were adopted as the Africanist equivalents of the IPA characters downstep and upstep. The correspondence of U+A71D to the IPA click letter ǃ is thus accidental. Coincidentally, U+A71E serves as the superscript variant of the extIPA percussive consonant ¡; the other percussive letters, ʬ and ʭ, do not have superscript support in Unicode.
  8. ^ This is actually the Vietnamese diacritic dấu hỏi, not specifically IPA, but graphically both are gelded question marks.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "UCD: UnicodeData.txt". The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2016-05-14.
  2. ^ a b Martin Dürst, Asmus Freytag (16 May 2007). "Unicode in XML and other Markup Languages". W3C. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
  3. ^ "fraction | Dart Package". Dart packages. 27 December 2021. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  4. ^ "MathML | General layout elements | Fractions". data2type GmbH (in German). 30 March 2021. Retrieved 13 January 2022.[dead link]
  5. ^ Martin Dürst, Asmus Freytag (16 May 2007). "Fraction Slash". W3C. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
  6. ^ "UCD: Scripts.txt". The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2022-09-21.
  7. ^ Everson, Michael; West, Andrew (2020-10-05). "L2/20-268: Revised proposal to add ten characters for Middle English to the UCS" (PDF).
  8. ^ Approved in 2024. Unicode pipeline: MODIFIER LETTER CAPITAL S
  9. ^ Kirk Miller & Michael Ashby, L2/20-253R Unicode request for IPA modifier letters (b), non-pulmonic.
  10. ^ Kirk Miller & Michael Ashby, L2/20-252R Unicode request for IPA modifier-letters (a), pulmonic
  11. ^ Silva, Eduardo Marín (2017-03-01). "L2/17-066R: Proposal to encode the Marca Registrada sign" (PDF).

unicode, subscripts, superscripts, this, article, contains, special, characters, without, proper, rendering, support, question, marks, boxes, other, symbols, unicode, subscripted, superscripted, versions, number, characters, including, full, arabic, numerals, . This article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols Unicode has subscripted and superscripted versions of a number of characters including a full set of Arabic numerals 1 These characters allow any polynomial chemical and certain other equations to be represented in plain text without using any form of markup like HTML or TeX The difference between superscript subscript and numerator denominator glyphs In many popular fonts the Unicode superscript and subscript characters are actually numerator and denominator glyphs The World Wide Web Consortium and the Unicode Consortium have made recommendations on the choice between using markup and using superscript and subscript characters When used in mathematical context MathML it is recommended to consistently use style markup for superscripts and subscripts However when super and sub scripts are to reflect semantic distinctions it is easier to work with these meanings encoded in text rather than markup for example in phonetic or phonemic transcription 2 Contents 1 Uses 2 Superscripts and subscripts block 3 Other superscript and subscript characters 4 Latin Greek Cyrillic and IPA tables 4 1 Superscript IPA 5 Composite characters 6 Notes 7 ReferencesUses editThe intended use 2 when these characters were added to Unicode was to produce true superscripts and subscripts so that chemical and algebraic formulas could be written without markup Thus H O using a subscript 2 character is supposed to be identical to H2O with subscript markup In reality many fonts that include these characters ignore the Unicode definition and instead design the digits for mathematical numerator and denominator glyphs 3 4 which are aligned with the cap line and the baseline respectively When used with the solidus these glyphs are a common substitute for diagonal fractions such as for the glyph This change was made because using markup does not give a good graphic approximation of fractions compare markup 3 4 with super sub script The change also makes the superscript letters useful for ordinal indicators more closely matching the ª and º characters However it makes them incorrect for normal superscript and subscript and so chemical and algebraic formulas are better rendered by using markup Unicode intended that diagonal fractions be rendered by a different mechanism the fraction slash U 2044 is visually similar to the solidus but when used with the ordinary digits not the superscripts and subscripts it instructs the layout system that a fraction such as is to be rendered using automatic glyph substitution 5 a User end support was quite poor for a number of years but browsers b and fonts increasingly support the intended Unicode behavior A selection of supporting fonts is displayed in the table below These will not display properly if you do not have the fonts installed or if your browser does not support this behavior Comparison of encodings of simple fractions Font U 00BD VULGAR FRACTION ONE HALF U 0031 DIGIT ONE U 2044 FRACTION SLASH U 0032 DIGIT TWO Browser default font 1 2 Andika 1 2 Arno Pro 1 2 URW Bookman 1 2 Brill 1 2 Brioso Pro 1 2 Calibri 1 2 Candara 1 2 Carlito 1 2 Cantarell 1 2 FiraGO 1 2 EB Garamond 1 2 Gentium Book 1 2 URW Gothic 1 2 Lato 1 2 Linux Libertine 1 2 Nimbus Roman 1 2 Nimbus Sans 1 2 Noto Sans 1 2 Noto Serif 1 2 Open Sans 1 2 Ubuntu 1 2 Yrsa 1 2Superscripts and subscripts block editMain article Superscripts and Subscripts Unicode block The most common superscript digits 1 2 and 3 were in ISO 8859 1 and were therefore carried over into those positions in the Latin 1 range of Unicode The rest were placed in a dedicated section of Unicode at U 2070 to U 209F The two tables below show these characters Each superscript or subscript character is preceded by a normal x to show the subscripting superscripting The table on the left contains the actual Unicode characters the one on the right contains the equivalents using HTML markup for the subscript or superscript Unicode characters 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F U 00Bx x x x U 207x x xⁱ x x x x x x x x x x x xⁿ U 208x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x U 209x xₐ xₑ xₒ xₓ xₔ xₕ xₖ xₗ xₘ xₙ xₚ xₛ xₜ Simulated using lt sup gt or lt sub gt tags 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F U 00Bx x2 x3 x1 U 207x x0 xi x4 x5 x6 x7 x8 x9 x x x x x xn U 208x x0 x1 x2 x3 x4 x5 x6 x7 x8 x9 x x x x x U 209x xa xe xo xx xe xh xk xl xm xn xp xs xt Reserved for future use Other characters from Latin 1 not related to super or sub scripts Other superscript and subscript characters editUnicode version 15 1 also includes subscript and superscript characters that are intended for semantic usage in the following blocks 1 6 Superscript The Latin 1 Supplement block contains the feminine and masculine ordinal indicators ª and º The Latin Extended C block contains one superscript ⱽ The Latin Extended D block contains six superscripts ꝰ ꟸ ꟹ The Latin Extended E block contains five superscripts ꭜ ꭝ ꭞ ꭟ ꭩ The Latin Extended F block is entirely superscript IPA letters The Spacing Modifier Letters block has superscripted letters and symbols used for phonetic transcription ʰ ʱ ʲ ʳ ʴ ʵ ʶ ʷ ʸ ˀ ˁ ˠ ˡ ˢ ˣ ˤ The Phonetic Extensions block has several superscripted letters and symbols Latin IPA ᴬ ᴭ ᴮ ᴯ ᴰ ᴱ ᴲ ᴳ ᴴ ᴵ ᴶ ᴷ ᴸ ᴹ ᴺ ᴻ ᴼ ᴽ ᴾ ᴿ ᵀ ᵁ ᵂ ᵃ ᵄ ᵅ ᵆ ᵇ ᵈ ᵉ ᵊ ᵋ ᵌ ᵍ ᵏ ᵐ ᵑ ᵒ ᵓ ᵖ ᵗ ᵘ ᵚ ᵛ Greek ᵝ ᵞ ᵟ ᵠ ᵡ Cyrillic ᵸ other ᵎ ᵔ ᵕ ᵙ ᵜ These are intended to indicate secondary articulation The Phonetic Extensions Supplement block has several more Latin IPA ᶛ ᶜ ᶝ ᶞ ᶟ ᶠ ᶡ ᶢ ᶣ ᶤ ᶥ ᶦ ᶧ ᶨ ᶩ ᶪ ᶫ ᶬ ᶭ ᶮ ᶯ ᶰ ᶱ ᶲ ᶳ ᶴ ᶵ ᶶ ᶷ ᶸ ᶹ ᶺ ᶻ ᶼ ᶽ ᶾ Greek ᶿ The Cyrillic Extended B block contains two Cyrillic superscripts ꚜ ꚝ The Cyrillic Extended D block contains many Cyrillic superscripts The Georgian block contains one superscripted Mkhedruli letter ჼ The Kanbun block has superscripted annotation characters used in Japanese copies of Classical Chinese texts The Tifinagh block has one superscript letter ⵯ The Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics and its Extended blocks contain several mostly consonant only letters to indicate syllable coda called Finals along with some characters that indicate syllable medial known as Medials Main block ᐜ ᐝ ᐞ ᐟ ᐠ ᐡ ᐢ ᐣ ᐤ ᐥ ᐦ ᐧ ᐨ ᐩ ᐪ ᑉ ᑊ ᑋ ᒃ ᒄ ᒡ ᒢ ᒻ ᒼ ᒽ ᒾ ᓐ ᓑ ᓒ ᓪ ᓫ ᔅ ᔆ ᔇ ᔈ ᔉ ᔊ ᔋ ᔥ ᔾ ᔿ ᕀ ᕁ ᕐ ᕑ ᕝ ᕪ ᕻ ᕯ ᕽ ᖅ ᖕ ᖖ ᖟ ᖦ ᖮ ᗮ ᘁ ᙆ ᙇ ᙚ ᙾ ᙿ Extended block ᣔ ᣕ ᣖ ᣗ ᣘ ᣙ ᣚ ᣛ ᣜ ᣝ ᣞ ᣟ ᣳ ᣴ ᣵ Combining superscript The Combining Diacritical Marks block contains medieval superscript letter diacritics These letters are written directly above other letters appearing in medieval Germanic manuscripts and so these glyphs do not include spacing for example u They are shown here over the dotted circle placeholder The Combining Diacritical Marks Extended block contains three combining insular letters for the Middle English Ormulum 7 The Combining Diacritical Marks Supplement block contains additional medieval superscript letter diacritics enough to complete the basic lowercase Latin alphabet except for j q and y a few small capitals and ligatures ae ao av and additional letters Greek The Cyrillic Extended A and B blocks contains multiple medieval superscript letter diacritics enough to complete the basic lowercase Cyrillic alphabet used in Church Slavonic texts also includes an additional ligature st The Cyrillic Extended D block has one additional combining character that being i Subscript The Latin Extended C block contains one subscript ⱼ The Phonetic Extensions block has several subscripted letters and symbols Latin IPA ᵢ ᵣ ᵤ ᵥ and Greek ᵦ ᵧ ᵨ ᵩ ᵪ The Cyrillic Extended D block also contains many Cyrillic subscripts Combining subscript The Combining Diacritical Marks Supplement block contains a combining subscript The Combining Diacritical Marks Extended block contains two combining letters for linguistic transcriptions of Scots Latin Greek Cyrillic and IPA tables editConsolidated the Unicode standard contains superscript and subscript versions of a subset of Latin Greek and Cyrillic letters Here they are arranged in alphabetical order for comparison or for copy and paste convenience Since these characters appear in different Unicode ranges they may not appear to be the same size or position due to font substitution in the browser Shaded cells mark small capitals that are not very distinct from minuscules and Greek letters that are indistinguishable from Latin and so would not be expected to be supported by Unicode Little punctuation is encoded Parentheses and the exclamation mark are shown above A question mark may be created with a superscript gelded question mark and a combining dot ˀ although some fonts do not render it properly Latin superscript and subscript letters A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Superscript capital ᴬ ᴮ ᴰ ᴱ ᴳ ᴴ ᴵ ᴶ ᴷ ᴸ ᴹ ᴺ ᴼ ᴾ ᴿ 8 ᵀ ᵁ ⱽ ᵂ Superscript small cap ᶦ ᶫ ᶰ ᶸ Superscript minuscule ᵃ ᵇ ᶜ ᵈ ᵉ ᶠ ᵍ ʰ ⁱ ʲ ᵏ ˡ ᵐ ⁿ ᵒ ᵖ ʳ ˢ ᵗ ᵘ ᵛ ʷ ˣ ʸ ᶻ Overscript capital Overscript minuscule Subscript minuscule ₐ ₑ ₕ ᵢ ⱼ ₖ ₗ ₘ ₙ ₒ ₚ ᵣ ₛ ₜ ᵤ ᵥ ₓ Underscript minuscule Greek superscript and subscript letters A B G D E Z H 8 I K L M N 3 O P R S T Y F X PS W Superscript minuscule A ᵝ ᵞ ᵟ ᵋ ᶿ ᶥ A ᵠ ᵡ Overscript minuscule Subscript minuscule ᵦ ᵧ ᵨ ᵩ ᵪ a b In some fonts Latin alpha ᵅ and upsilon ᶹ can be used as superscript Greek alpha and upsilon ᵋ and ᶥ are also officially Latin letters but display the same as Greek Cyrillic superscript and subscript letters A Ә B V G G D E Ye Zh Z Ѕ Ꚉ I I Yi Ј K L M N O Ө P R S Ҫ Superscript ᵸ Overscript Subscript T U Ү Ұ Ꙋ F H Ѡ C Ch Џ Sh Sh Ꙑ Y Ѣ E Yu Ꙗ Ѥ Ѧ Ѫ Ѭ Ѳ Ӏ Superscript ꚜ ꚝ Overscript Subscript Many of the Cyrillic characters were added to the Cyrillic Extended D block which was added to the free Gentium Plus and Andika fonts with version 6 2 in February 2023 See also small caps in Unicode Superscript IPA edit The Latin Extended F block was created for the remaining superscript IPA letters They were added to the free Gentium Plus and Andika fonts with version 6 2 in February 2023 The Unicode characters for superscript modifier IPA and extIPA consonant letters are as follows Characters for sounds with secondary articulation are set off in parentheses and placed below the base letters IPA and extIPA consonants along with superscript variants and their Unicode code points Bi labial Labio dental Dental Alveolar Post alveolar Retro flex Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyn geal Glottal Nasal m ᵐ 1D50 ɱ ᶬ 1DAC n ⁿ 207F ɳ ᶯ 1DAF ɲ ᶮ 1DAE ŋ ᵑ 1D51 ɴ ᶰ 1DB0 Plosive p ᵖ 1D56 b ᵇ 1D47 t ᵗ 1D57 d ᵈ 1D48 ʈ 107AF ɖ 1078B c ᶜ 1D9C ɟ ᶡ 1DA1 k ᵏ 1D4F ɡ ᶢ g ᵍ 1DA2 1D4D q 107A5 ɢ 10792 ʡ 107B3 ʔ ˀ 02C0 Affricate ʦ 107AC ʣ 10787 ʧ 107AE ʨ 107AB ʤ 1078A ʥ 10789 ꭧ 107AD ꭦ 10788 Fricative ɸ ᶲ 1DB2 b ᵝ 1D5D f ᶠ 1DA0 v ᵛ 1D5B 8 ᶿ 1DBF d ᶞ 1D9E s ˢ 02E2 z ᶻ 1DBB ʃ ᶴ 1DB4 ɕ ᶝ 1D9D ʒ ᶾ 1DBE ʑ ᶽ 1DBD ʂ ᶳ 1DB3 ʐ ᶼ 1DBC c ᶜ 1D9C 0327 c ʝ ᶨ 1DA8 x ˣ 02E3 ɧ 10797 ɣ ˠ 02E0 x ᵡ 1D61 ʁ ʶ 02B6 ħ 10795 ʩ 10790 ʕ ˤ 02E4 d h ʰ 02B0 ɦ ʱ 02B1 Approximant ʋ ᶹ 1DB9 ɹ ʴ 02B4 ɻ ʵ 02B5 j ʲ 02B2 ɥ ᶣ 1DA3 ʍ ꭩ AB69 ɰ ᶭ 1DAD w ʷ 02B7 Tap flap ⱱ 107B0 ɾ 107A9 ɽ 107A8 Trill ʙ 10784 r ʳ 02B3 ʀ 107AA ʜ 10796 ʢ 107B4 Lateral fricative ɬ 1079B ʪ 10799 ɮ 1079E ʫ 1079A ꞎ 1079D 1079F 107A1 1079C Lateral approximant l ˡ 02E1 ɫ ꭞ AB5E e ɭ ᶩ 1DA9 ʎ 107A0 ʟ ᶫ 1DAB Lateral tap flap ɺ 107A6 107A7 Implosive ɓ 10785 ɗ 1078C ᶑ 1078D ʄ 10798 ɠ 10793 ʛ 10794 Click release f ʘ 107B5 ǀ 107B6 ʇ 107BB ǃ ꜝ A71D ʗ 107BC 107B9 ps TBA ǂ 107B8 107BE ʞ 107BF Lateral clickrelease ǁ 107B7 ʖ 107BD Percussive ꜞ A71E g The spacing diacritic for ejective consonants U 2BC works with superscript letters despite not being superscript itself ᵖʼ ᵗʼ ᶜʼ ᵏˣʼ If a distinction needs to be made the combining apostrophe U 315 may be used ᵖ ᵗ ᶜ ᵏˣ The spacing diacritic should be used for a baseline letter with a superscript release such as tˢʼ or kˣʼ where the scope of the apostrophe includes the non superscript letter but the combining apostrophe U 315 might be used to indicate a weakly articulated ejective consonant like ᵗ or ᵏ where the whole consonant is written as a superscript or together with U 2BC when separate apostrophes have scope over the base and modifier letters as in pʼᵏˣ 9 Spacing diacritics as in tʲ cannot be secondarily superscripted in plain text ᵗʲ In this instance the old IPA letter for tʲ ƫ has a superscript variant in Unicode U 1DB5 ᶵ as does the lateral U 1DDA ᶪ but that is not generally the case Among older letters ꜧ U A727 a graphic variant of ɮ is supported at ꭜ U AB5C The Unicode characters for superscript modifier IPA vowel letters plus an extended letter found in English dictionaries are as follows Most recently retired alternative letters are also supported they are set off in parentheses and placed below the standard IPA letters IPA vowels and superscript variants Front Central Back Close i ⁱ 2071 y ʸ 02B8 ɨ ᶤ 1DA4 ʉ ᶶ 1DB6 ɯ ᵚ 1D5A u ᵘ 1D58 Near close ɪ ᶦ 1DA6 ɩ ᶥ 1DA5 ʏ 107B2 ᵻ ᶧ 1DA7 ʊ ᶷ 1DB7 ɷ 107A4 Close mid e ᵉ 1D49 o 107A2 ɘ 1078E ɵ ᶱ 1DB1 ɤ 10791 o ᵒ 1D52 Mid e ᵊ 1D4A Open mid ɛ ᵋ 1D4B œ ꟹ A7F9 ɜ ᶟ 1D9F ᴈ ᵌ 1D4C ɞ 1078F ʌ ᶺ 1DBA ɔ ᵓ 1D53 Near open ae 10783 ɶ 107A3 ɐ ᵄ 1D44 ɑ ᵅ 1D45 ɒ ᶛ 1D9B Open a ᵃ 1D43 The precomposed Unicode rhotic vowel letters ɚ ɝ are not directly supported The rhotic diacritic U 02DE should be used instead ᵊ ᶟ 10 ɜ and ᶟ are reversed ɛ The older IPA turned ɛ ᴈ is also supported at U 1D4C ᵌ However the briefly resurrected vowel letter ʚ U 029A is not supported only its reversed replacement ɞ is Among older vowels ᴜ U 1D1C a graphic variant of ʊ is supported at ᶸ U 1DB8 The two length marks are also supported Length marks Long Half long ː 10781 ˑ 10782 Superscript wildcards full caps are partially supported e g ᴺC prenasalized consonant N prestopped nasal P fricative release NᴾF epenthetic plosive CVNᵀ tone bearing syllable Cᴸ liquid or lateral release Cᴿ rhotic or resonant release Vᴳ off glide diphthong Cⱽ fleeting vowel Superscript S for sibilant release has preliminary approval for Unicode 17 as superscript Ʞ for fleeting epenthetic click does not Other basic Latin superscript wildcards for tone and weak indeterminate sounds as described in the article on the International Phonetic Alphabet are mostly supported See table in previous section In addition a very few IPA letters beyond the basic Latin alphabet have combining forms or are supported as subscripts Additional IPA characters ɑ ae c d e ʃ ʍ ʔ ʼ Overscript h Subscript ₔ Underscript Composite characters editPrimarily for compatibility with earlier character sets Unicode contains a number of characters that compose super and subscripts with other symbols 1 In most fonts these render much better than attempts to construct these symbols from the above characters or by using markup The Latin 1 Supplement block contains the precomposed fractions and The copyright c and registered trademark signs are also in this block The General Punctuation block contains the permille sign and the per ten thousand sign and Basic Latin has the percent sign The Number Forms block contains several precomposed fractions The Letterlike Symbols block contains a few symbols composed of subscript and superscript characters The Enclosed Alphanumeric Supplement block contains three superscript abbreviations MC for marque de commerce trademark MD for marque deposee registered trademark both used in Canada MR for marca registrada registered trademark in Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries 11 The Miscellaneous Technical block has one additional subscript a subscript 10 for the purpose of scientific notation The Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics and its Extended blocks contain several letters composed with superscripted letters to indicate extended sound values Main block ᐂ ᐫ ᐬ ᐭ ᐮ ᐰ ᑍ ᑧ ᑨ ᑩ ᑪ ᑬ ᒅ ᒆ ᒇ ᒈ ᒊ ᒤ ᓁ ᓔ ᓮ ᔌ ᔍ ᔎ ᔏ ᔧ ᕅ ᕔ ᕿ ᖀ ᖁ ᖂ ᖃ ᖄ ᖎ ᖏ ᖐ ᖑ ᖒ ᖓ ᖔ ᙯ ᙰ ᙱ ᙲ ᙳ ᙴ ᙵ ᙶ Extended block ᢰ ᢱ ᢲ ᢳ ᢴ ᢵ ᢶ ᢷ ᢸ ᢹ ᢺ ᢻ ᢼ ᢽ ᢾ ᢿ ᣀ ᣁ ᣂ ᣃ ᣄ ᣅ Notes edit For a general overview and technical information on glyph substitution though not specifically for fractions GSUB Glyph Substitution Table in the OpenType specification on the Microsoft Typography site Such as Chrome Firefox and Falkon Superscript c is composed of superscript c and a combining cedilla which should display properly in a good font Superscript c was specifically requested for this purpose in Unicode proposal L2 03 180 U 02E4 ˤ MODIFIER LETTER SMALL REVERSED GLOTTAL STOP is the superscript variant of U 0295 ʕ LATIN LETTER PHARYNGEAL VOICED FRICATIVE and is defined for IPA use The similar character U 02C1 ˁ MODIFIER LETTER REVERSED GLOTTAL STOP is a reversed U 02C0 ˀ MODIFIER LETTER GLOTTAL STOP perhaps a gelded reversed question mark Fonts are inconsistent in whether they look different and what the difference is In Microsoft fonts this character was erroneously designed as a superscript ꬸ Old style click letters were approved in 2024 per IPA request Unicode pipeline Latin modifier letters for clicks U A71D ꜝ and A71E ꜞ were adopted as the Africanist equivalents of the IPA characters ꜜ downstep and ꜛ upstep The correspondence of U A71D ꜝ to the IPA click letter ǃ is thus accidental Coincidentally U A71E ꜞ serves as the superscript variant of the extIPA percussive consonant the other percussive letters ʬ and ʭ do not have superscript support in Unicode This is actually the Vietnamese diacritic dấu hỏi not specifically IPA but graphically both are gelded question marks References edit nbsp Writing portal a b c UCD UnicodeData txt The Unicode Standard Retrieved 2016 05 14 a b Martin Durst Asmus Freytag 16 May 2007 Unicode in XML and other Markup Languages W3C Retrieved 13 September 2010 fraction Dart Package Dart packages 27 December 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2022 MathML General layout elements Fractions data2type GmbH in German 30 March 2021 Retrieved 13 January 2022 dead link Martin Durst Asmus Freytag 16 May 2007 Fraction Slash W3C Retrieved 13 September 2010 UCD Scripts txt The Unicode Standard Retrieved 2022 09 21 Everson Michael West Andrew 2020 10 05 L2 20 268 Revised proposal to add ten characters for Middle English to the UCS PDF Approved in 2024 Unicode pipeline MODIFIER LETTER CAPITAL S Kirk Miller amp Michael Ashby L2 20 253R Unicode request for IPA modifier letters b non pulmonic Kirk Miller amp Michael Ashby L2 20 252R Unicode request for IPA modifier letters a pulmonic Silva Eduardo Marin 2017 03 01 L2 17 066R Proposal to encode the Marca Registrada sign PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Unicode subscripts and superscripts amp oldid 1222806478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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