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Latin Extended-E

All code points in the Latin Extended-E block.

U+AB30
U+AB31
U+AB32
U+AB33
U+AB34
U+AB35
U+AB36
U+AB37
U+AB38
U+AB39
U+AB3B
U+AB3D
U+AB3E
ꬿ
U+AB3F
U+AB40
U+AB41
U+AB42
U+AB43
U+AB44
U+AB45
U+AB46
U+AB47
U+AB48
U+AB4B
U+AB4C
U+AB4D
U+AB4E
U+AB4F
U+AB50
U+AB51
U+AB52
U+AB53
U+AB54
U+AB55
U+AB56
U+AB57
U+AB58
U+AB59
U+AB5A
U+AB5B
U+AB5C
U+AB5D
U+AB5E
U+AB5F
U+AB60
U+AB61
U+AB62
U+AB63
U+AB64
U+AB65
U+AB66
U+AB67
U+AB68
U+AB69
U+AB6A
U+AB6B

Tips

  • Ensure font stack includes Latin Extended-E glyphs and provide a reliable fallback.
  • Specify font-family explicitly to avoid missing glyphs in UI typography.
  • Test rendering for diacritics, ligatures, and combining marks across platforms.
  • Reference a glyph-accurate font when naming or presenting unusual characters.
  • Document where each glyph is used and track any rendering issues with audits.

Latin Extended-E covers additional letters used in minority and extended orthographies. This block supports specialized linguistic and scholarly content, so designers often pair it with clear typography and accessible fallback paths. Typical usage includes catalogues, educational apps, and transliteration tools where precise forms matter.

Common pitfalls involve inconsistent font coverage and fallback gaps that yield empty boxes or generic placeholders. Use consistent font stacks and test across devices. Historically, this range extends the Latin alphabet to capture rare diacritics and letters beyond the basic set, reflecting a long practice of expanding typographic reach to accommodate diverse languages and scholarly annotations.