Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr27/tr27-4.html> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 13 of
13
with 100 triples per page.
- tr27-4.html date "2001-05-16".
- tr27-4.html first1 "Mark".
- tr27-4.html first2 "Michael".
- tr27-4.html first3 "Asmus".
- tr27-4.html first4 "John H.".
- tr27-4.html isCitedBy Right-to-left.
- tr27-4.html last1 "Davis".
- tr27-4.html last2 "Everson".
- tr27-4.html last3 "Freytag".
- tr27-4.html last4 "Jenkins".
- tr27-4.html quote "Most early Etruscan texts have right-to-left directionality. From the third century BCE, left-to-right texts appear, showing the influence of Latin. Oscan, Umbrian, and Faliscan also generally have right-to-left directionality. Boustrophedon appears rarely, and not especially early .... Despite this, for reasons of implementation simplicity, many scholars prefer left-to-right presentation of texts, as this is also their practice when transcribing the texts into Latin script. Accordingly, the Old Italic script has a default directionality of strong left-to-right in this standard. When directional overrides are used to produce right-to-left presentation, the glyphs in fonts must be mirrored ...".
- tr27-4.html title "Unicode Standard Annex #27: Unicode 3.1".
- tr27-4.html url "http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr27/tr27-4.html".