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Drmccreedy (talk | contribs) Update unichar template to match character name from definitive source https://unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/UnicodeData.txt |
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{{incomplete list|date=April 2022}}<!-- General pattern:
Duplicate character, original character -->
*{{unichar|1F549|OM SYMBOL|nlink=Om}}
*{{unichar|212B|ANGSTROM SIGN|nlink=Ångström}}
*{{unichar|00B5|MICRO SIGN
|nlink=Micro-}}
*{{unichar|037E|GREEK QUESTION MARK|nlink=Question_mark#Greek_question_mark}}
*{{unichar|212A|KELVIN SIGN|nlink=Kelvin}}
*{{unichar|2024|ONE DOT LEADER|nlink=Leader_(typography)}}
*{{unichar|2126|ohm sign}}
*{{Unichar|2236|RATIO}}
*{{Unichar|0387|}}: {{Unichar|00B7|COLON}}
*{{Unichar|2A75|}}: {{Unichar|03d|COLON}}, {{Unichar|03d|COLON}}
*{{Unichar|2A76|}}: {{Unichar|03d|COLON}}, {{Unichar|03d|COLON}}, {{Unichar|03d|COLON}}
*{{Unichar|27EAF}}: {{Unichar|FA23}}
*{{Unichar|2135}}: {{Unichar|5d0}}
===Greek===
Many [[Greek alphabet|Greek letters]] are used as [[technical symbol]]s. All of the Greek letters are encoded in the Greek section of Unicode but many are encoded a second time under the name of the technical symbol they represent. The "[[micro sign]]" (U+00B5, µ) is obviously inherited from [[ISO 8859-1]], but the origin of the others is less clear.
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