U+16C7 Runic Letter Iwaz Eoh
U+16C7 was added in Unicode version 3.0 in 1999. It belongs to the block
This character is a Other Letter and is mainly used in the Runic script.
The glyph is not a composition. It has no designated width in East Asian texts. In bidirectional text it is written from left to right. When changing direction it is not mirrored. The word that U+16C7 forms with similar adjacent characters prevents a line break inside it.
Wikipedia ma następujące informacje na temat tej współrzędnej kodowej:
Eiwaz or Eihaz is the reconstructed Proto-Germanic name of the rune ᛇ, coming from a word for "yew". Two variants of the word are reconstructed for Proto-Germanic, *īhaz (*ē2haz, from Proto-Indo-European *eikos), continued in Old English as ēoh (also īh), and *īwaz (*ē2waz, from Proto-Indo-European *eiwos), continued in Old English as īw (whence English yew). The latter is possibly an early loan from the Celtic, compare Gaulish ivos, Breton ivin, Welsh ywen, Old Irish ēo. The common spelling of the rune's name, "Eihwaz", combines the two variants; strictly based on the Old English evidence, a spelling "Eihaz" would be more proper.
Following the convention of Wolfgang Krause, the rune's standard transliteration today is ï, though this designation is somewhat arbitrary as the rune's purpose and origin is still not well understood. Elmer Antonsen and Leo Connolly theorized that the rune originally stood for a Proto-Germanic vowel lost by the time of the earliest known runic inscriptions, though they put forth different vowels (Antonsen put forth [æː] while Connolly put forth [ɨ(ː)]). Ottar Grønvik proposed [ç]. Tineke Looijenga postulates the rune was originally a bindrune of ᛁ and ᛃ, having the sound value of [ji(ː)] or [i(ː)j]. Bengt Odenstedt suggests it may have been adapted from the classical Latin alphabet's Z, or Y.
The rune survives in the Anglo-Saxon futhorc as ᛇ Ēoh or Īh "yew" (note that ᛖ eoh "horse" has a short diphthong). In futhorc inscriptions Ēoh appears as both a vowel around /iː/, and as a consonant around [x] and [ç]. As a vowel, Ēoh shows up in jïslheard (ᛡᛇᛋᛚᚻᛠᚱᛞ) on the Dover Stone. As a consonant, Ēoh shows up in almeïttig (ᚪᛚᛗᛖᛇᛏᛏᛁᚷ) on the Ruthwell Cross.
The Anglo-Saxon rune poem reads:
- ᛇ Eoh bẏþ utan unsmeþe treoƿ,
- heard hrusan fæst, hẏrde fẏres,
- ƿẏrtrumun underƿreþẏd, ƿẏn on eþle.
- The yew is a tree with rough bark,
- hard and fast in the earth, supported by its roots,
- a guardian of flame and a joy on native land.
Reprezentacje
System | Reprezentacje |
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Nº | 5831 |
UTF-8 | E1 9B 87 |
UTF-16 | 16 C7 |
UTF-32 | 00 00 16 C7 |
Adres URL cytowany | %E1%9B%87 |
HTML hex reference | ᛇ |
Błędne windows-1252 Mojibake | ᛇ |
Kodowanie: GB18030 (hex bajtów) | 81 34 B3 35 |
Gdzie indziej
Kompletny opis
Właściwość | Wartość |
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3.0 (1999) | |
RUNIC LETTER IWAZ EOH | |
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Runic | |
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Left To Right | |
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Yes | |
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neutral | |
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not a number | |
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R |