Yezidi (Unicode block)

Yezidi is a Unicode block containing characters from the Yezidi script, which was used for writing the Kurmanji language (Northern Kurdish) for liturgical purposes in Iraq and Georgia. There is also some limited modern usage.

Yezidi
RangeU+11900..U+1195F
(96 code points)
PlaneSMP
ScriptsYezidi
Assigned47 code points
Unused49 reserved code points
Unicode version history
13.047 (+47)
Note: [1][2]

Block

Yezidi[1][2]
Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
 0123456789ABCDEF
U+10E8x ๐บ€ ๐บ ๐บ‚ ๐บƒ ๐บ„ ๐บ… ๐บ† ๐บ‡ ๐บˆ ๐บ‰ ๐บŠ ๐บ‹ ๐บŒ ๐บ ๐บŽ ๐บ
U+10E9x ๐บ ๐บ‘ ๐บ’ ๐บ“ ๐บ” ๐บ• ๐บ– ๐บ— ๐บ˜ ๐บ™ ๐บš ๐บ› ๐บœ ๐บ ๐บž ๐บŸ
U+10EAx ๐บ  ๐บก ๐บข ๐บฃ ๐บค ๐บฅ ๐บฆ ๐บง ๐บจ ๐บฉ ๐บซ ๐บฌ ๐บญ
U+10EBx ๐บฐ ๐บฑ
Notes
1.^ As of Unicode version 13.0
2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points

History

The following Unicode-related documents record the purpose and process of defining specific characters in the Yezidi block:

VersionFinal code points[lower-alpha 1]CountL2 IDWG2 IDDocument
13.0U+10E80..10EB150L2/18-238Karaca, Erdal; Pirbari, Dimitri; Rovenchak, Andrij (2018-05-25), Preliminary proposal for encoding the Yezidi script in the SMP
L2/18-241Anderson, Deborah; et al. (2018-07-25), "5", Recommendations to UTC # 156 July 2018 on Script Proposals
L2/18-284Karaca, Erdal; Pirbari, Dimitri; Rovenchak, Andrij (2018-08-20), Preliminary proposal for encoding the Yezidi script
L2/18-300Anderson, Deborah; et al. (2018-09-14), "5", Recommendations to UTC #157 on Script Proposals
L2/19-051RN5053Rovenchak, Andrij; Pirbari, Dimitri; Karaca, Erdal (2019-03-11), Proposal for encoding the Yezidi script in the SMP of the UCS
L2/19-047Anderson, Deborah; et al. (2019-01-13), "5", Recommendations to UTC #158 January 2019 on Script Proposals
L2/19-164Rovenchak, Andrij (2019-01-29), Information on Yezidi UUM and hamza
L2/19-173Anderson, Deborah; et al. (2019-04-29), "9", Recommendations to UTC #159 April-May 2019 on Script Proposals
L2/19-122Moore, Lisa (2019-05-08), "C.5", UTC #159 Minutes
N5122"M68.03", Unconfirmed minutes of WG 2 meeting 68, 2019-12-31
  1. Proposed code points and characters names may differ from final code points and names
gollark: Probably.
gollark: Not THAT many.
gollark: That... isn't very hard though?
gollark: But I also want it to be utterly overengineered.
gollark: So to mock them, I'm implementing a prime factorization program in potatOS.

References

  1. "Unicode character database". The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
  2. "Enumerated Versions of The Unicode Standard". The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
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