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.
Pattern script is an alternative writing system for English created by J. 'Mach' Wust.
1:1 2:2 3:3 4:4 5:5 6:6 7:7 8:8 9:9 0:0 -:- ^:ny
q:ng' w:w e:-e r:r t:t y:y u:-u i:-i o:-o p:p @:a [:e
a:-a s:s d:d f:f g:g h:h j:j k:k l:l ;:; ::: ]:i
z:z x:sh c:ch v:v b:b n:n m:m ,:, .:. /:u _:o
!:! ":" ':' (:( ):) ~:NY
Q:NG' W:W E:E R:R T:T Y:Y U:U I:I O:O P:P
A:A S:S D:D F:F G:G H:H J:J K:K L:L
Z:Z X:SH C:CH V:V B:B N:N M:M ?:?
1:1 2:2 3:3 4:4 5:5 6:6 7:7 8:8 9:9 0:0 -:- ^:ō
q:a w:w e:-e r:e t:ū y:-ī u:-u i:-i o:-o p:p @:o [:(CV)-i
a:-a s:ē d:-ē f:-ū g:ī h:h j:i k:k l:l ;:; ::: ]:(V)-i
z:-ā x:ā c:’ v:u b:(CV)-u n:n m:m ,:, .:. /:(V)-u _:-ō
!:! ":" ':' (:( ):)
E:(CV)-e R:(V)-e O:(CV)-o
L:(V)-o
?:?
Reks Fel Abugida expanded to include numbers, & more punctuation.
1-9= b, d, f, g, h, j, k, l, m with a dot below. 0=z with a dot below ? is 'd' with a dot below, from the Esperanto word for question, "demando". Exclamation point is 'd' with a dot below the top line. 'C' & 'k' are 'd' with 1 & 3 dots in the middle inspired by Arabic.
This is a clone of Reks Fel Abugida1:--k 2:--y 3:--w 4:--t 5:--tsw 6:--chy 7:t 8:--h 9:--n 0:n -:m ^:r
q:-yu w:w- e:-e r:r- t:t- y:y- u:-u i:-i o:-o p:p- @:-ya [:--kw
a:-a s:s- d:d- f:e g:g- h:h- j:i k:k- l:o ;:h ::k ]:--ky
z:z- x:a c:-yo v:u b:-b n:n- m:m- ,:, .:. /:! _:t
!:-k ":-y #:-w $:-t %:-tsw &:-chy ':' (:-h ):-n =:accent (V) ~:accent (Chinese loanword CV/VC) |:accent (Chinese loanword V)
W:w E:-we R:(-xu) Y:y U:-wu I:-wi O:-wo P:p {:-kw `:accent (CV)
A:-wa D:d F:-ye G:g H:(-xi) J:-yi K:(--xi) L:& +:accent (CVC) *:=/: }:-ky
Z:z V:(--xu) B:b N:(-m) M:(--m) <:( >:) ?:?
1:zh 2:ch 3:sh 4:(zh, ch, sh, r, z, c, s)-i 5:-ai 6:-i-(V) 7:-u-(V) 8:---ng 9:---n 0:-o -:-ei ^:--ê
q:q w:w e:-e r:r t:t y:y u:u i:i o:-o p:p @:--a [:-ou
a:-a s:s d:d f:f g:g h:h j:j k:k l:l ;:-ng ::-n ]:-ao
z:z x:x c:c v:ü b:b n:n m:m ,:, .:. /:! _:yu-
!:tone1 ":tone2 #:tone3 $:tone4 %:-ai &:-i ':-u (:-ng ):-n =:--ei ~:-ê |:'
Q:ai W:wu E:e R:-r T:--r Y:yi U:-ü-(V) O:o `:、 {:--ou
A:a D:ei F:-e G:---r H:ê L:ou +:; *:: }:--ao
Z:ao V:yu B:----r <:( >:) ?:?
Please see the Kynaatt Language and alphabet chart for Katemayar at kynaatt.com
This is a clone of Atemayar (Rigid Script)Key on keyboard => Resulting letter:
Ss => Ââ Ee => Ŵŵ Uu => Ŷŷ Kk => Ẃẃ,Ýý Ll => Ẅẅ,Ÿÿ
\ => thousands place marker | => affix separator
` => 00 ~ => 000
Left/right => Lowercase/uppercase variant:
,/< => end of sentence ./> => end of section ;/: => sentence pause
[/{ => left parenthesis ]/} => right parenthesis
-/_ => left quotation mark =/+ => right quotation mark
//? => question mark '/" => exclamation mark
https://www.omniglot.com/conscripts/demano.htm
This is a cloneVersion 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]
Here is my rendition of the Taiogeuna alphabet featured on Omniglot. I was able to create a glyph for every character in the "Basic Latin" pack which eliminates the need for any accented letters (as my other fonts commonly use), please refer to the chart below for the un-transliteratable characters. I hope you enjoy. :D
AE = a (only lowercase)
EO = e (only lowercase)
AI = i (only lowercase)
OI = o (only lowercase)
UE = u (only lowercase)
CH = Q
DH = B
PH = F
SH = X
TH = K
ZH = J
Start of Sentence = ,
Double Vowel = *
Start of Line = #