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Font encodings for Cyrillic languages

The Cyrillic font encodings support the following languages. Note that some languages can be properly typeset with more than one encoding.

T2A:
Abaza, Avar, Agul, Adyghei, Azerbaijani, Altai, Balkar, Bashkir, Bulgarian, Buryat, Byelorussian, Gagauz, Dargin, Dungan, Ingush, Kabardino-Cherkess, Kazakh, Kalmyk, Karakalpak, Karachaevskii, Karelian, Kirghiz, Komi-Zyrian, Komi-Permyak, Kumyk, Lak, Lezghin, Macedonian, Mari-Mountain, Mari-Valley, Moldavian, Mongolian, Mordvin-Moksha, Mordvin-Erzya, Nogai, Oroch, Osetin, Russian, Rutul, Serbian, Tabasaran, Tadzhik, Tatar, Tati, Teleut, Tofalar, Tuva, Turkmen, Udmurt, Uzbek, Ukrainian, Hanty-Obskii, Hanty-Surgut, Gipsi, Chechen, Chuvash, Crimean-Tatar.
T2B:
Abaza, Avar, Agul, Adyghei, Aleut, Altai, Balkar, Byelorussian, Bulgarian, Buryat, Gagauz, Dargin, Dolgan, Dungan, Ingush, Itelmen, Kabardino-Cherkess, Kalmyk, Karakalpak, Karachaevskii, Karelian, Ketskii, Kirghiz, Komi-Zyrian, Komi-Permyak, Koryak, Kumyk, Kurdian, Lak, Lezghin, Mansi, Mari-Valley, Moldavian, Mongolian, Mordvin-Moksha, Mordvin-Erzya, Nanai, Nganasan, Negidal, Nenets, Nivh, Nogai, Oroch, Russian, Rutul, Selkup, Tabasaran, Tadzhik, Tatar, Tati, Teleut, Tofalar, Tuva, Turkmen, Udyghei, Uigur, Ulch, Khakass, Hanty-Vahovskii, Hanty-Kazymskii, Hanty-Obskii, Hanty-Surgut, Hanty-Shurysharskii, Gipsi, Chechen, Chukcha, Shor, Evenk, Even, Enets, Eskimo, Yukagir, Crimean Tatar, Yakut.
T2C:
Abkhazian, Bulgarian, Gagauz, Karelian, Komi-Zyrian, Komi-Permyak, Kumyk, Mansi, Moldavian, Mordvin-Moksha, Mordvin-Erzya, Nanai, Orok (Uilta), Negidal, Nogai, Oroch, Russian, Saam, Old-Bulgarian, Old-Russian, Tati, Teleut, Hanty-Obskii, Hanty-Surgut, Evenk, Crimean Tatar.

The X2 encoding was designed to support all the above languages. Its name does not start with T because, for example, it contains no Latin letters (it is purely a Cyrillic glyph container); it therefore cannot be used in mixed-script documents along with the other T* encodings. Please consult Section 6.4 Naming conventions of the file fntguide.tex in the base LATEX distribution for details of the differences between LATEX font encodings and how they are named.

There are two other LATEX Cyrillic font encodings, OT2 and LCY, that are not included in the base LATEX distribution. The first is a 7-bit encoding (hence the O) developed by the AMS; it is useful for typesetting relatively small fragments of text in Cyrillic, using a Latin transliteration scheme. The other, LCY, is an 8-bit Cyrillic encoding which is not compatible with the requirements for LATEX T* encodings (hence the L); thus it is not suitable for typesetting multi-lingual documents, but it can be used in Plain TEX-based macro packages because it is an extension of OT1. These two encodings are supported by babel and by ot2cyr.


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Next: Input encodings Up: Cyrillic languages support in LATEX Previous: Usage
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1999-07-12