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Cyrillic Extended-D

All code points in the Cyrillic Extended-D block.

𞀰
U+1E030
𞀱
U+1E031
𞀲
U+1E032
𞀳
U+1E033
𞀴
U+1E034
𞀵
U+1E035
𞀶
U+1E036
𞀷
U+1E037
𞀸
U+1E038
𞀹
U+1E039
𞀺
U+1E03A
𞀻
U+1E03B
𞀼
U+1E03C
𞀽
U+1E03D
𞀾
U+1E03E
𞀿
U+1E03F
𞁀
U+1E040
𞁁
U+1E041
𞁂
U+1E042
𞁃
U+1E043
𞁄
U+1E044
𞁅
U+1E045
𞁆
U+1E046
𞁇
U+1E047
𞁈
U+1E048
𞁉
U+1E049
𞁊
U+1E04A
𞁋
U+1E04B
𞁌
U+1E04C
𞁍
U+1E04D
𞁎
U+1E04E
𞁏
U+1E04F
𞁐
U+1E050
𞁑
U+1E051
𞁒
U+1E052
𞁓
U+1E053
𞁔
U+1E054
𞁕
U+1E055
𞁖
U+1E056
𞁗
U+1E057
𞁘
U+1E058
𞁙
U+1E059
𞁚
U+1E05A
𞁛
U+1E05B
𞁜
U+1E05C
𞁝
U+1E05D
𞁞
U+1E05E
𞁟
U+1E05F
𞁠
U+1E060
𞁡
U+1E061
𞁢
U+1E062
𞁣
U+1E063
𞁤
U+1E064
𞁥
U+1E065
𞁦
U+1E066
𞁧
U+1E067
𞁨
U+1E068
𞁩
U+1E069
𞁪
U+1E06A
𞁫
U+1E06B
𞁬
U+1E06C
𞁭
U+1E06D
𞂏
U+1E08F

Tips

  • Audit font coverage to ensure Cyrillic Extended-D characters display consistently across platforms.
  • Define fallback strategies for missing glyphs to avoid broken rendering.
  • Test text rendering in common UI contexts: headings, code blocks, and data tables.
  • Document usage guidelines for editors to prevent accidental omission of rare characters.
  • Coordinate with typesetting and localization teams to maintain correct character shaping.

Cyrillic Extended-D contains specialized characters used in linguistic work and regional orthography. It is not a common everyday script, so accessibility and fallback handling are crucial. See how related blocks like Geometric Shapes, Arrows, Currency Symbols, and Box Drawing approach typography and rendering.

Typical usage centers on scholarly texts, historical documents, and niche interfaces that require precise character encoding. Pitfalls include inconsistent font coverage, misinterpreted input, and rendering quirks in low-resource environments. A high-level view of its history notes a move toward broader multilingual support, with emphasis on extended Cyrillic sets that emerged from linguistic and academic needs rather than everyday communication.