Copyglyph

Latin Extended-D

All code points in the Latin Extended-D block.

U+A720
U+A721
U+A722
U+A723
U+A724
U+A725
U+A726
U+A727
U+A728
U+A729
U+A72A
U+A72B
U+A72C
U+A72D
U+A730
U+A731
U+A732
U+A733
U+A734
U+A735
U+A736
U+A737
U+A738
U+A739
U+A73A
U+A73B
U+A73C
U+A73D
U+A73E
U+A73F
U+A740
U+A741
U+A742
U+A743
U+A744
U+A745
U+A746
U+A747
U+A748
U+A749
U+A74A
U+A74B
U+A74C
U+A74D
U+A74E
U+A74F
U+A750
U+A751
U+A752
U+A753
U+A754
U+A755
U+A756
U+A757
U+A758
U+A759
U+A75A
U+A75B
U+A75C
U+A75D
U+A75E
U+A75F
U+A760
U+A761
U+A762
U+A763
U+A764
U+A765
U+A766
U+A767
U+A768
U+A769

Tips

  • Audit your font picker to ensure Latin Extended-D glyphs are accessible across weights.
  • Provide fallback fonts or fallbacks for environments without extended glyph support.
  • Test rendering of diacritics, ligatures, and special letters in UI elements and icons.
  • Document typography decisions and include examples in design handoff materials.
  • Consider accessibility: ensure sufficient contrast and screen-reader clarity for symbols.

Latin Extended-D covers rare Latin letters and symbols used in scholarly texts and linguistic work. It sits alongside basic Latin blocks and complements other extended sets. Understanding its scope helps designers plan fonts, glyph counts, and fallback strategies. For reference, see Geometric Shapes for glyph usage considerations and Arrows when indicating directional cues in UI.

In practice, use these glyphs sparingly in labels, annotations, or advanced UI components where they add meaning. Be mindful of rendering differences across platforms, and test with real content. A historical note: this block arose from expanding typographic coverage to support minority languages and linguistic notation, emphasizing correct character representation and typographic handling. Related contexts include the broader families like Currency Symbols and Box Drawing for terminal-style illustrations.