ᛜThis is an elder futhark set of runes included reversed runes and numbers. For reversed rune press Shift. Here goes the layout on keyboard.
F - Fehu - ᚠ
U - Uruz - ᚢ
X - Thurus - ᚦ
A - Ansus - ᚫ
R - Raido - ᚱ
C,K - Kennaz - ᚲ
G - Gebo - The rune of gift and partnership, in case you don't know - ᚷ
V,W - Wunjo - ᚹ
H - Hagalaz - ᚺ
N - Nautiz - ᚾ
I - Isa - ᛁ
J - Jera - ᛃ (This one means the time to harvest)
Z - Eihwaz - ᛇ
P - Perth - ᛈ (This one is the secret)
Y - Algiz - ᛉ
S - Soulu - ᛊ
T - Teiwaz - ᛏ
B - Berkana - ᛒ
E - Ehwaz - ᛖ
M - Mannaz - ᛗ
L - Laguz - ᛚ
Q - Inguz - ᛜ
O - Othala - ᛟ
D - Dagaz - ᛞ - The rise of new day
RUNE GUIDE
Runes are used phonetically, so most of the time you should shorten double-letters to single-letters ("Hello" would become "helo"). All the appropriate runes are bound to the appropriate keys, so you can type freely without worrying about which rune you're using. However, a few runes which represent diphthongs which are unused in Modern English are bound to the SHIFT-number row. They are as follows: !-th, @-eo, #-ng, $-ɶ, %-æ, ^-ia/io, &-ea, *-kk. (-st. Additionally, in Old English, there are two types of "g"s, a soft "g" (which is bound to the "g" key), as in "sage", and a hard "g" (which is bound to the ")" key), as in "saga".
Keys 1-7 also include the different Roman numerals (I, V, X, L, C, D, M), which can be combined to make up a number (from what I can tell, the Anglo-Saxons probably used Roman numerals or tally marks - most likely the former).
A posher runic letter font, for carving into walls and Dwarven tombs. Features a number of punctuation dots; single dot for space, double for comma, triple for colon, four (in a square) for a full stop, and three (in a triangle) for apostrophes and quotes.
This is a clone of Runified