*Note: the first few lines of the preview is a romanization. The "proper" font consists of the triangle, parabola, and diamond-like shapes in the bottom half*
A revised script of my alien conlang "cimar" Built with Apple's Hebrew QWERTY in mind, though if you are comfortable with the standard Hebrew layout you should have little trouble as long as you keep in mind the four characters which are used for non-standard sounds.
This script is a semi-featural abjad/abugida hybrid inspired by. Read right-to-left, consonants appear as main glyphs while vowels are diacritics which hang above that follows it. of the glyph determines place of , and diacritics inside of the glyph represent manner. The numbers are in hexadecimal and bound to latin characters (1-9, A-F). Like Hebrew, they are read least-to-greatest place value.
Here are the correspondances with Hebrew characters, their latin transcriptions, and a few IPA symbols where the glyphs make a different sound than in Hebrew and/or English.
מ נ
n m
ף ת ך ק
'(ʔ) k t p
ב ד ג
g d b
פ ס צ כ ה
h x(x~χ) c(ɕ) s f(ɸ)
ש ז ח ר
r(ɣ~ʁ) j(ʑ) z v(β)
ל ט
y l
א ע י ו
o i e a
There are many latin letters that don't exist in this alphabet,for example,q is actually a strong r,while r is a soft one;c has the spanish ch sound,and ñ (you can only use it if you have a spanish keyboard,sorry) is replaced by the sh sound;there are also 3 extra vowels:y (long i/russian й),w (even more closed spanish u,or woo if you speak english) and a schwa (you can use it by typing the letter h);also,every vowels has its accented version (á,é,í,ý,ó,ú,w and h can be used by typing ü and ö respectively)
The "Kepom" script is a constructed alphabet invented by James Ong Zhi Siang for his constructed language Argusian. It is an abugida, meaning that vowels are not their own characters but are attached to consonants above and / or below. This is a recreation of it using FontStruct tools, in case someone would want to be able to use or write with it themselves. More information about the Kepom script can be found on Omniglot here.
Lowercase letters are shortcuts for hard to type letters. Lowercase vowels are vowels with a short vocal stop at the end with no glide to the next constant. Uppercase vowels have no vocal stop and glide to the next constant. Lowercase n is a Velar Nasal. The lowercase t is the "th" sound Theta or a voiceless dental fricative. Never lowercase r and b are trills.
This is my conlang called Ezunas.
How To Use Ezunas
Type c and j to get tsemuly and dzemuly.
Type C and J to get chahang and jahang.
Type L M and N to get lyahang, ngasu, and nyahang respectively.
Type q and x to get shahang and zhahang.
Letters semuly and zemuly have distinct initial, medial, and final forms.
For semuly, type S, s, or $.
For zemuly, type Z, z, or %.
Type the vowels in caps to lengthen them.
Type ' for the glottal stop.
Type < and > for kpekpe and gbegbe.
Version 1 of the Lucarian script font is out!
View the original script here: https://www.omniglot.com/conscripts/lucarian.htm
HERE'S HOW TO USE THE FONT:
d, h, j, l, m, n, r, s, t and z will give you the corresponding letters in full form.
b, f, g, k, p and q give you the truncated form of those letters. Uppercase versions send out their full forms.
Type c, S and Z for ch, sh and zh respectively.
a, o, e, i, y and u give you the corresponding vowels, while A, O and U give you ae, oe and uu respectively.
Type ' for the glottal stop letter with both sides truncated, use < and > for that letter with just the left side and the right side respectively, and = gives you the full letter.
The comma, period, question mark and exclamation mark gives you the corresponding punctuation.
Keyboard input = Letter representing sound (NOTE: Case matters!)
h, k, l, m, n, p and s have their respective consonant glyphs
a, e, i, o and u have their respective vowel glyphs
A and E are used for the glyphs representing [æ] and [ɛ] respectively
N is used for the diactric coda glyph representing [ŋ]