S In Different Languages



If you need to type in many different languages, the Q International Keyboard can help. It enables you to type almost any language that uses the Latin, Cyrillic or Greek alphabets, and is free. It enables you to type almost any language that uses the Latin, Cyrillic or Greek alphabets, and is free. According to scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, there is only one word in existence that’s the same in every language, and that word is ‘huh’. By recording segments of informal language from across five continents, the scientists have revealed that the world ‘huh’ is the same in 31 different languages.

Unicode specifies over 100,000 different characters across hundreds of languages and symbol sets. So rather than each computer company inventing their own set of symbols, they can just use Unicode's set. This essentially means that Unicode symbols work almost everywhere. Different contexts and domains trigger different impressions, attitudes and behaviors. What is taken as a personality shift due to a change of language may have little, if anything, to do with. In some English words of French origin, the letter s is silent, as in 'isle' or 'debris'. The sh digraph for English /ʃ/arises in Middle English (alongside sch ), replacing the Old English sc digraph. Similarly, Old High German sc was replaced by sch in Early Modern High German orthography. Related characters.

The MyPlate icon is currently available in 21 languages: English*, Arabic, Chinese (simplified and traditional), Filipino-Tagalog, French, German, Haitian Creole, Hindi, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Pashto, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Thai, Urdu, and Vietnamese. Below are images of the MyPlate icon in several file formats. You will need the free Adobe Acrobat Reader to view and print PDF files. TIF and EPS are high-resolution formats that you will not be able to open unless you have specific programs such as those in the Adobe Creative Suite.
The first in the Ten Tips Nutrition Education Series — Choose MyPlate — is available in 20 languages. With the exception of the English version, these tips are consistent with the 2010 Dietary Guidelines and have not been updated with the 2015-2020 Dietary Guidelines.
Note: If you are on a mobile device, you may need to rotate your phone to see the full table.

LanguageMyPlate iconStandard resolutionHigh resolutionTip sheet #1

Arabic

Chinese - simplified

Chinese - traditional

Filipino-Tagalog

French

German

Haitian Creole

JPGPNGTIFEPS

Hindi

Indonesian

Italian

Japanese

Korean

Malay

Pashto

Portuguese

Russian

Spanish

Thai

Urdu

Vietnamese

Related Material

Permissions for Logos, Icons, Graphics, Website Content, and Website Links
MyPlate Graphics Standards
MyPlate on Food Labels

This is a simple online tool that converts regular text into text symbols which resemble the normal alphabet letters. It converts text into several symbol sets which are listed in the second text area, and the conversion is done in real-time and in your browser using JavaScript. If you'd like your text to be randomly translated into different symbol (character by character), check out my other translator called 'fancy text'.

You'd be forgiven for thinking that this translator converts text into a number of different fonts - that's not what's happening here. So how does it work? Unicode.

Unicode Symbols

This translator is essentially generating unicode symbols which resemble letters from the latin alphabet (a, b, c, ...). Unicode is an international standard for symbols in computer-related industries. It supersedes 'ASCII' and actually contains all the ASCII symbols within it's specification. There are literally tens of thousands of different symbols defined by Unicode compared to 256 characters defined by the extended ASCII set. On top of this, unicode allows us to add diacritic marks which agument our characters and allow us to produce weird stuff like this:

h̸̨̧̨̡̘̰̗̝̮̮͔̜̖͂̽͛̉̓́͛̑͂͘͘ͅẽ̸̢̺̝͓̱̙̮̲͍̑̉ͅl̷̙̯̬̯͇̰̩̬̺͊̋̊̽l̵̢̛͇̤̺̩̞͈̥̱̩̳̖̎̃̂̓͆̍̐͌̒͋̿͝͝͝ͅö̵̡̻̟̺̪̤̙̟͚̬́̎̉̚͜͝

By the way, the above text is called 'Zalgo text', and I also made a zalgo translator which you can use to generate that type of text.

So yeah, the unicode standard is awesome, and it allows us to have all sorts of fun with text.

Languages

Copy and Paste

I said earlier that this translator isn't simple generating the same text with a different font, it's actually generating different text symbols from the unicode spec. This has the awesome benefit that we can copy and paste symbols wherever we want (you couldn't do this if it were just a font). You might have found this generator after looking for a text to symbol converter which would allow you to have weird symbols in your profile like all the other l33t hackers.

L33t hacking aside though, weird text symbols of letters are great for making your message on social media stand out. Just look at the difference between:

> Look at my post!

and:

> 𝓛𝓸𝓸𝓴 𝓪𝓽 𝓶𝔂 𝓹𝓸𝓼𝓽!

The Letter D In Different Languages

Since social media sites don't generally allow fonts, it gives the user a huge surprise when they see something new like that. So whether you want to put symbols in your Tumblr blogs, Facebook statuses, Twitter profiles or tweets, Instagram bios or wherever, this translator should hopefully be handy for that. Having different fonts Instagram bios has become fairly popular recently, so it might be worth jumping on that trend.

Different Letters

Different Types Of S

Are you looking for letters that aren't included in this generator? There are all sorts of different letters in Unicode, and I've done my best to include as many different symbol fonts as I can, but there is always room for improvement! If you find any different letters that I don't have, please let me know! I want to include as many different fonts as possible. Meanwhile, feel free to post a comment below with some crazy unicode symbols :)


S In Different Alphabet

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