This is my imagination of how Cyrrilic and Latin letters would look like if were more "runic".
1:1 2:2 3:3 4:4 5:5 6:6 7:7 8:8 9:9 0:0 -:-
q:q w:w e:e r:r t:t y:ï u:u i:i o:o p:p
a:a s:s d:d f:f g:g h:h j:j k:k l:l ;:; :::
z:z x:x c:ng v:th b:b n:n m:m ,:, .:.
!:! “:" ‘:' (:( ):)
Q:q W:w E:e R:ʀ T:t Y:y U:y I:ia O:o P:p
A:a S:s D:d F:p G:g H:h J:j K:k L:l
Z:ʀ X:sh C:ng V:v B:b N:n M:m ?:?
there is no C, you have to replace this with S or K depending on the sound,
same thing for the V, W or F
and the Y, I, J or IJ
in origional futhark there is no Q or X, these are made here by Q=K+U and X=K+S
numbers 1-9 are good 0 gives 10
as there is no 0
shift+1to0 gives 11 to 20
I added a dot and a double and tripple, hiden under . : and ; I have seen them on markings but Im not sure of there use yet.
the ng rune is located under ñ (altgr+n)
th is under þ (altgr+t)
ï is under æ (altgr+z)
have fun
I just found out the concept of BindRunes I will try to add those to the list too, not sure how yet. but I will
uppercase will give bind runes, if the previus ends in a | then you and the next starts with a | you can merge them.
This is the alphabet for a worldbuilding project I'm working on. It needs the reference decoder (which has not been published anywhere) to be used properly/read. It is also unfinished, and I would like to improve some of the punctuation marks as I feel they don't match the rest of the letters (especially the quotation marks). Please give me feedback on this!
Just to test out the font contructor, and being unable to find exactly what I needed, I decided to try my hand at the younger futhark!
Capital letters are the long-stave runes, while the lowercase letters are the short-twig runes. They were generally not used simultaneously, so pick one system and stick to it.
There are many repeated glyphs, and this is because of how the system works; there are several closely-related sounds that share a rune. K/G, F/V, B/P, to name a few. (and don't get me started on the vowels)
I tried to match the latin letters you're typing to whatever rune most closely corresponds to it... from a norse point of view? As these writing systems are not a 1-1 match, it won't be 100% accurate all the time, and I'm also an amateur hobbyist from Norway, but I tried my best with what I knew.
For example, while I used ár (ᛅ/ᛆ) for E due to its usage in the [ei] diphtong (eg. in names like Einar (ᛅᛁᚾᛅᚱ)), it has really no rune on its own, and can also be written with íss, the I rune.
Compatible with most extra letters used in Scandinavian languages and Old Norse, and not really meant for writing in modern English, where nothing is consistent at all.
Update, Oct. 3rd: Fixed the lǫgr (ᛚ) rune. It is no longer mirrored. Not sure how I managed to make that glaring error, and I apologise to the thirty people who already downloaded this.