Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
National Fonts The 'Decision of the Constitutional Court No. 12-14/2553' which is published in the Government Gazette using the font "TH Sarabun PSK" The National Fonts (Thai: ฟอนต์แห่งชาติ; RTGS: [font] haeng chat) [1] are 2 sets of free and open-source computer fonts for the Thai script sponsored by the Thai government.
Thai movable metal type arranged on a composing stick. These were commonly used for typesetting during the first half of the twentieth century. Thai typography concerns the representation of the Thai script in print and on displays, and dates to the earliest printed Thai text in 1819. The printing press was introduced by Western missionaries during the mid-nineteenth century, and the printed ...
The Thai script (Thai: อักษรไทย, RTGS: akson thai, pronounced [ʔàksɔ̌ːn tʰāj]) is the abugida used to write Thai, Southern Thai and many other languages spoken in Thailand. The Thai script itself (as used to write Thai) has 44 consonant symbols (Thai: พยัญชนะ, phayanchana), 16 vowel symbols (Thai: สระ, sara) that combine into at least 32 vowel forms ...
List of typefaces included with Microsoft WindowsThis is a list of typefaces shipped with Windows 3.1x through to Windows 11. [1][2][3][4][5][6] Typefaces only shipped with Microsoft Office or other Microsoft applications are not included. [7] The "Included from" column indicates the first edition of Windows in which the font was included.
Graphical representation of the Thai Unicode block Thai is a Unicode block containing characters for the Thai, Lanna Tai, and Pali languages. It is based on the Thai Industrial Standard 620-2533.
Thai Industrial Standard 620-2533, commonly referred to as TIS-620, is the most common single-byte character encoding for the Thai language. [citation needed] The standard is published by the Thai Industrial Standards Institute (TISI), an organ of the Ministry of Industry under the Royal Thai Government, and is the sole official standard for ...
Typefaces used for signage in public areas, such as roads and airports, often share characteristics of, or are chosen for, their readability.
The Tai Noi/Lao script and the Thai script derive from a common ancestral Tai script of what is now northern Thailand which was an adaptation of the Khmer script, rounded by the influence of the Mon script, all of which are descendants of the Pallava script of southern India. [4] The Fak Kham script represents the prototype for the Tai Noi script, which was developed in Lan Xang. The first ...