This is the writing of the maþla (mathla) language I created. It is spoken by gods and contains magic.
The phonetics and lexems are based on a mixture of Proto-Germanic, Old Norse and my fantasy. It has 26 vowels and doesn't have any b, d or g sounds.
I designed this font based on the word 'Thunderous'. My thinking in how the word relates is due to the Norse God Thor. I then started to look in to old Norse culture, this got me interested in runes. So with deeper research in to the Futharks spawned this type.
ᛜThis is an elder futhark set of runes included reversed runes and numbers. For reversed rune press Shift. Here goes the layout on keyboard.
F - Fehu - ᚠ
U - Uruz - ᚢ
X - Thurus - ᚦ
A - Ansus - ᚫ
R - Raido - ᚱ
C,K - Kennaz - ᚲ
G - Gebo - The rune of gift and partnership, in case you don't know - ᚷ
V,W - Wunjo - ᚹ
H - Hagalaz - ᚺ
N - Nautiz - ᚾ
I - Isa - ᛁ
J - Jera - ᛃ (This one means the time to harvest)
Z - Eihwaz - ᛇ
P - Perth - ᛈ (This one is the secret)
Y - Algiz - ᛉ
S - Soulu - ᛊ
T - Teiwaz - ᛏ
B - Berkana - ᛒ
E - Ehwaz - ᛖ
M - Mannaz - ᛗ
L - Laguz - ᛚ
Q - Inguz - ᛜ
O - Othala - ᛟ
D - Dagaz - ᛞ - The rise of new day
A posher runic letter font, for carving into walls and Dwarven tombs. Features a number of punctuation dots; single dot for space, double for comma, triple for colon, four (in a square) for a full stop, and three (in a triangle) for apostrophes and quotes.
This is a clone of RunifiedA runic letter font, for your Viking and Dwarven writing needs! Features a number of punctuation dots; single dot for space, double for comma, triple for colon, four (in a square) for a full stop, and three (in a triangle) for apostrophes and quotes.
RUNE GUIDE
Runes are used phonetically, so most of the time you should shorten double-letters to single-letters ("Hello" would become "helo"). All the appropriate runes are bound to the appropriate keys, so you can type freely without worrying about which rune you're using. However, a few runes which represent diphthongs which are unused in Modern English are bound to the SHIFT-number row. They are as follows: !-th, @-eo, #-ng, $-ɶ, %-æ, ^-ia/io, &-ea, *-kk. (-st. Additionally, in Old English, there are two types of "g"s, a soft "g" (which is bound to the "g" key), as in "sage", and a hard "g" (which is bound to the ")" key), as in "saga".
Keys 1-7 also include the different Roman numerals (I, V, X, L, C, D, M), which can be combined to make up a number (from what I can tell, the Anglo-Saxons probably used Roman numerals or tally marks - most likely the former).