Samples of simulation typefaces

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A simulation typeface is one designed after a unique or stereotypical aspect of the letterforms or scripts of a different language.[1][2][3]

Name Example 1 Example 2 Example 3
Bagel (typeface) (Hebrew/Latin) 199px
Circumcision (typeface) (Hebrew/Latin) 199px
Faux Arabic (Arabic/Latin) 199px
Faux Chinese (Chinese/Latin) 199px
Faux Hebrew (Hebrew/Latin) Faux Hebrew.png
Faux Sanskrit (Devanagari/Latin) 199px
Hananiah (typeface) (Hebrew/Latin) 199px
Herculanum (typeface) 199px
Lithos (Greek epigraphic/Latin) 199px
Rusticana 199px 199px
Samarkan (typeface) (Devanagari/Latin) 199px
Sherwood (typeface) 199px
Skia (typeface) (Greek epigraphic/Latin) 199px 199px Skiaspecimen3.svg
Talmud (typeface) (Hebrew/Latin) 199px

See also

References

  1. Tereza Haralambous and Yannis Haralambous, "Characters, Glyphs and Beyond", Glyph and Typesetting Workshop, Kyōto, 2003. PDF, p. 24
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

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