209 ãã¼ã¸ - Then he took his eldest son that should have reigned in his stead, and offered him for a burnt offering upon the wall. And there was great indignation against Israel : and they departed from him, and returned to their own land.
209 ãã¼ã¸ - Then he took his eldest son that should have reigned in his stead, and offered him for a burnt offering upon the wall. And there was great indignation against Israel : and they departed from him, and returned to their own land.
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I guess i'm supposing that the Greek script has it's own version of running script, but I'm having trouble tracking down any great examples of one, I found a small sample in Bergling's Art Monograms and Lettering, but I have no idea how typical the forms shown are. If anyone can help point me in the right direction on this, id appreciate any lead. Thnx. example from Monograms.
Albanian Alphabet!!! ALBANIAN ALPHABET Albanian is an Indo-European language which forms its own branch in the Indo-European family and has no close relatives. There are about 6.4 million Albanian speakers in Albania, the southern Serbian province of Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Italy, Greece, Bulgaria and Ukraine. Albanian has been written with various alphabet since the 15th century. Origi
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For the same ligature that was also used in the context of Cyrillic, see Uk (Cyrillic) and 8. Ou (Majuscule: È¢, Minuscule: È£) is a ligature of the Greek letters ο and Ï which was frequently used in Byzantine manuscripts. This omicron-upsilon ligature is still seen today on icon artwork in Greek Orthodox churches, and sometimes in graffiti or other forms of informal or decorative writing. The ligat
Renaissance Greek with Ligatures (or, for short, RGreekL2) is a font that will allow anyone easily to write Greek in the style of the Renaissance. For example, an editor of Greek texts may use it to reproduce a ligatured word in the manuscript that could be interpreted in different ways. Since the first printers adopted this style of writing for their type, the font can also be used to represent,
Early Greek print, from a 1566 edition of Aristotle. The sample shows the -os ligature in the middle of the second line (in the word μÎθοδοÏ), the kai ligature below it in the third line, and the -ou- ligature right below that in the fourth line, along many others. 18th-century typeface sample by William Caslon, showing a greatly reduced set of ligatures (-Î¿Ï - in "Ïοῦ", end of first line; -ÏÏ- in
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