#Cordia new font download download#
Source: Download this shareware font ($5) from James Kass's webpage. (browau.ttf, browaub.ttf, browaui.ttf, and browauz.ttf) Stats: Version 2.20 has 338 glyphs and no kerning pairs Note: The Thai range of this font is visually identical to "BrowalliaUPC". Note: Identical to BrowalliaUPC but supports the 1252 codepage. (browa.ttf, browab.ttf, browai.ttf, and browaz.ttf) OpenType Layout Tables: Arabic (default, Farsi, Urdu), Devanagari, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Han Ideographic (default, Japanese, Chinese simplified, Chinese traditional), Kana (default, Japanese), Kannada, Korean, Tamil Support: Arabic script (Arabic, Balochi, Persian, Shahmukhi, Urdu), Armenian, Cyrillic (all or most of range), Devanagari, Georgian (Mkhedruli and Asomtavruli), Greek (including polytonic and Coptic characters), Gurmukhi, Hebrew, IPA, Japanese (Hiragana, Katakana, Kanji/Han Ideographs), Kannada, Korean (Hangul only), Latin, Tamil, Thai, Vietnamese Stats: Version 1.00 has 50,377 glyphs and no kerning pairs Source: Comes with Microsoft's Office 2000, Front0, Office XP and Publisher 2002. Stats: Version 2.20 has 339 glyphs and no kerning pairs (angsau.ttf, angsaub.ttf, angsaub.ttf, and angsauz.ttf)
Stats: Version 2.30 has 339 glyphs and no kerning pairs
#Cordia new font download windows#
Source: Comes with Microsoft's Windows XP and Windows 2000. Note: The Thai range of this font is visually identical to "AngsanaUPC". Note: Identical to AngsanaUPC but supports the 1252 codepage.
(angsa.ttf, angsab.ttf, angsai.ttf, and angsaz.ttf) Within Thailand, Lao is often written using Thai script. Thai script is used to write Thai and other Southeast Asian languages. The Thai script is Indic in origin and is used in Thailand. WAZU JAPAN's Gallery of Unicode Fonts Thai