Mojikyo
Mojikyo (文字鏡 Mojikyō) is a set of computer software and fonts for enhanced logogram word-processing. As of October 2002, it collected 126,560/142,228 characters (CD-ROM/WWW version). Among them, 101,936/128,573 characters belong to the extended CJKV family.[1] Many of the characters are considered obsolete and are not included in Unicode.
Premise
The Mojikyo fonts were created as a method of providing a complete documentary of Chinese, Korean, and Japanese characters. It was created in order to provide an easy method to compile large selections of Chinese characters as well as Japanese and Korean characters. This is in addition to a large selection of various ancient scripts.
Composition
Mojikyo fonts come in a series of zip files around 2–5 megabytes each and contain varying numbers of characters. Characters include the modern Latin alphabet, Russian Cyrillic as well as a variety of various markers most seen in the Arial font, in addition to various ancient scripts. All of this comes with a character map that allows the users to browse through their downloaded Mojikyo fonts, copying and pasting characters in lieu of typing them on a keyboard.
Collected writing systems
Living
- Chinese — Hanzi
- Japanese — Kanji, Kana (including Hentaigana)
- Korean — Hanja
- Latin alphabet with diacritics
- Cyrillic script with diacritics
Dead or obsolete
- Ancient Chinese
- Oracle bone script: 3,354 characters
- Seal script (still in use): 10,969 characters
- Taiwanese kana
- Vietnamese — Chữ Nôm
- Sanskrit — Siddham: 1,875 characters
- Tangut script: 6,000 characters
- Sui script: 145 characters
See also
References
- ↑ 今昔文字鏡とは [About Mojikyo]. 今昔文字鏡 / Mojikyo.com (in Japanese). Kinokuniya.
External links
- Mojikyo Institute - Mojikyo Institute website
- Mojikyo Institute - Kinokuniya's Mojikyo website