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Latin Extended-C

All code points in the Latin Extended-C block.

U+2C60
U+2C61
U+2C62
U+2C63
U+2C64
U+2C65
U+2C66
U+2C67
U+2C68
U+2C69
U+2C6A
U+2C6B
U+2C6C
U+2C6D
U+2C6E
U+2C6F
U+2C70
U+2C71
U+2C72
U+2C73
U+2C74
U+2C75
U+2C76
U+2C77
U+2C78
U+2C79
U+2C7A
U+2C7B
U+2C7C
U+2C7D
U+2C7E
Ɀ
U+2C7F

Tips

  • Design with clear typography, ensuring glyphs render consistently across fonts and platforms.
  • Test text rendering in multiple sizes to catch diacritic placement and combining marks issues.
  • Provide fallbacks or content warnings for rare characters when sharing PDFs or web fonts.
  • Document usage notes for data pipelines: encoding, normalization, and sorting implications.
  • Coordinate with font designers to confirm coverage and avoid missing glyphs in UI labels.

Latin Extended-C covers a range of historical and specialized letters used in a few languages and scholarly notations. In practice, these code points appear mainly in linguistic, philological, and academic contexts, not everyday UI text. This makes them important for accurate typography and data interchange but less common in general content.

Typical usage involves robust font support, proper Unicode normalization, and careful rendering in search and indexing systems. Pitfalls include inconsistent glyph coverage across fonts, platform-specific shaping quirks, and legacy data that lacks proper normalization. Historically, these characters emerged to fill gaps in Latin-based transcription systems, enabling precise representation without inventing new scripts.