Re: Symbol for an upside down capital L, pointing to the right?

From: Philippe Verdy <verdy_p_at_wanadoo.fr>
Date: Mon, 4 Jan 2016 12:31:23 +0100

May be because in this document, it is a measurement of time in seconds,
and related to the letter T/Tau, rather than G/Gamma.
So the idea of the Tyronian Et is not so stupid, even if the glyph used by
the printer is higher than expected (and most probably borrowed from
another font, possibly using it for the digit 7).

2016-01-04 9:06 GMT+01:00 "Jörg Knappen" <jknappen_at_web.de>:

> Err... in what respect would this symbol be different from a CAPITAL GREEK
> LETTER GAMMA?
>
> --Jörg Knappen
>
> *Gesendet:* Freitag, 25. Dezember 2015 um 14:43 Uhr
> *Von:* "Costello, Roger L." <costello_at_mitre.org>
> *An:* "unicode_at_unicode.org" <unicode_at_unicode.org>
> *Betreff:* Symbol for an upside down capital L, pointing to the right?
> Hi Folks,
>
> Here is the upside down capital L, pointing to the left:
>
> ⅂ - TURNED SANS-SERIF CAPITAL L (U+2142)
>
> Is there a symbol for an upside down capital L, pointing to the right?
>
> /Roger
>
>
Received on Mon Jan 04 2016 - 05:33:12 CST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Mon Jan 04 2016 - 05:33:12 CST