![]() Stats: Version 1.00 has 50,377 glyphs and no kerning pairs ![]() Source: Comes with Microsoft's Office 2000, Front0, Office XP and Publisher 2002. Note: The Han Ideographs in this font are not Korean in style. OpenType Layout Tables: Cyrillic, Greek, Korean, Han Ideographic, Kana, Latin Support: Cyrillic (Russian, expanded spacing), Greek (expanded spacing), Japanese (Hiragana and Katakana only), Korean (Hangul, Hanja/Han Ideographs), Latin The fonts aren't automatically installed in Windows' "Fonts" folder but can probably be found in the "Resource\CIDFont" subdirectory of whichever directory Adobe Reader 7.0 was installed in (for example C:\Program Files\Adobe\Acrobat 7.0). Source: Free download from Adobe Reader 7.0 font packs. (AdobeMyungjoStd-Medium.otf from running alf_kor.exe) Some Hanja are visually different in North & South Korea than they are in other countries. A limited set of Hanja is used for Korean with most words being written with Hangul. Han Ideographs are called Hanja in Korea. Hangul is an alphabetic/syllabic script made up of components called "jamos". Korean is written using Hangul and a limited number of Han Ideographs. WAZU JAPAN's Gallery of Unicode Fonts Korean
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