Also:
> Nice insightful post Op , would like to read more from you ♂ ∆
Do you think he realizes he's using a Delta and not an alpha?
Hmm. If you flipped it backward, it would also look like a Japanese character, the hiragana for "Sa".
I only bring it up because of the Japanese Maple being an important part of the other stories.
G and g aren't that different. Take the horizontal line of the G and turn it 90 degrees and it looks like a q, which is similar to a g.
pretty much any ascii or unicode.
For the most part, just search ascii star
and something will show up.
You'll find crappy sites like this to copy from.
Use this site: http://www.i2symbol.com/twitter-emoticons
Find the emoji you want (in this case scroll all the down to "Flags Symbols" and the American flags are near the bottom), click it, copy it from the text box it appears in and then paste it into your nickname in Discord and it'll appear.
I realise it might be a bit late now, but this can serve as a future reference.
It's not an equals sign, it in fact should be a proportional sign but i couldn't find one at the time: http://www.i2symbol.com/images/symbols/math/proportional_to_u221D_icon_256x256.png
So it can be either stamina or HP
However u put an Iranian province yet u excluded Chad because it is not a majority Arab?
🅱️🅾️🅱️🅰️ <strong>ⓕ</strong> ℹ️ <strong>ⓢ</strong> 🇭
one of the saddest scenes after Episode 2 where Gang Hwa accidentally found that Yu Ri came back alive. My tears non-stop flowing till the end of the episode (⌣̩̩́_⌣̩̩̀)
​
I copied the check-mark straight from your post.
I got the ballot-box X from the Googler. Search results included this page; I copied it from there, selected my cell (back in Excel), went into the formula bar and pasted it there. NOTE: I couldn't easily copy it from the images down. I grabbed it from the top area where they're in text (and easier to copy).
I don't think I understand what you mean by "tick mark" (english is my second language, so to me it's this), but I'm sure we're talking about two different things, haha.
I've studied typography, so I can at least tell you that font-making software will always let you enter a different glyph for each UTF code. I don't see how this relates to what you said about "actual fonts and how they are named" though. Something that fonts sometimes do is "interpret" what you're writing and adapt accordingly, like automatically making quotation marks slant to the right or left depending on where you place them.
My first language is portuguese, so our keyboards have the basic accents. Here it's common for people to use the grave accent (`) instead of an apostrophe, but it's still wrong.
Of course, whether you write "I'd" or "I´d" or "I`d", people will understand what you mean, but it's technically wrong. Same as switching º (ordinal indicator) and ° (degree sign), they may look similar depending on the font, but they're not the same.
It's strange, I really had no idea that my way is so wrong. Like I said, I wasn't taught very well, so I might have a few bad habits. In most examples I saw, the strokes were connected. In fact, they are in the chart you linked. What's the point of saying that さ is two strokes, but then telling me it's correct to break it up into 3,?
And I get what you're saying about distortions, but I don't think that's the case here. I didn't create my own version, I followed what I was seeing everywhere.
yeah we saw that but were thinking it would give you more of this kind of shape, and thats not what we wanted, definitely worth looking into though!
Unfortunately not, though that thing is amazing.
What I mean by japanese sign is one of these: http://www.i2symbol.com/images/cool-letters/hiragana/hiragana_letter_o_u304A_icon_256x256.png
I'm pretty sure that's the exact one. The object was completely white though.
Oh, and by moaning sounds, I mean it literally went "ahh" when they touched it.
Remember that you can use a non-superscript * instead of a ×. It's basically looks the same except with a vertical line through it.