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Specific information[]
- Ikariam does not use this server name or number at the present time, no matter which community / language version you use. Maybe, in the future they will
- Ikariam:
- Used the Greek Alphabet WP as names for the first twenty-four (24) worlds; one through twenty-four (1 – 24)
- Used Greek Immortal Deities WP as names for twenty-six (26) worlds; twenty-five through forty-four, forty-eight, fifty, fifty-two, fifty-six, fifty-eight and sixty (25 – 44, 48, 50, 52, 56, 58 & 60)
- Used Greek Mythological Figures WP (Deified Mortals WP, Kings WP, Notable Women WP and Minor figures WP) as names for five (5) worlds; forty-five, fifty-three through fifty-five and fifty-seven (45, 53 – 55 & 57)
- Used Greek Mythological Creatures WP as names for two (2) worlds; forty-six and forty-nine (46 & 49)
- Used Greek Mythological Heroes WP as names for three (3) worlds; forty-seven, fifty-one and fifty-nine (47, 51 & 59)
- Ikariam:
- Ikariam used/uses a few specialty servers for the following reasons:
- "Speed servers" (1) (Closed) (not used often / reset after each session) - Special servers for when they needed to test changes that occurred at higher levels of the game and it would have take too long at normal speed to reach those higher levels of game play or researches
- "Global / International / Pangaia servers" (1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5) - Special server for players from ALL language communities to play together on the same server
- These servers are currently located at the EN site (https://lobby.ikariam.gameforge.com/en_GB/hub GF)
- "Asphodel / Graveyard servers" (1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5) - Special servers (Graveyards) for when players ghost out of the game
- These servers are currently located at the EN site (https://lobby.ikariam.gameforge.com/en_GB/hub GF)
- "Test servers [ 1 (Closed) / 2 (Closed) / 3 (Internal use #1) / 4 (Internal use #2) / 5 (Internal use #3) / 6 (Internal use #4) / 7 (Open) / 8 (Closed)]," - Special servers for testing the beta WP patches before they go out to the live servers
- These servers are currently located at the EN test site (https://lobby-test.ikariam.gameforge.com/en_GB/hub GF)
- "War servers" [ 1 (Closed - Rounds #1 – #7) (reset after each round - 1 per language group) / 2 (Permanent Round #8 - Open in most communities until 2028)] - Special servers with special rules, designed specifically toward in-game battles
- These servers
are currentlywill be located at the EN site (https://lobby.ikariam.gameforge.com/en_GB/hub GF)
- These servers
Statistical information[]
- There are none at the present time!
Special Attributes[]
- There are NONE at the present time!
General information[]
Jod, Jot, Yod or Yot, uppercase Ϳ, lowercase ϳ; in Unicode, an analogue of it's Latin and Cyrillic counterparts for use as a special phonetic character in historical Greek WP linguistics, which is encoded in the Greek script block as Unicode WP U+037F and as U+03F3. It is used to denote the palatal glide WP /j/ in the context of Greek script. It is called "Yot" in the Unicode standard, after the German name of the letter J j.
This page uses CC-BY-SA (Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike F) content from Wikipedia WP | |
View wikipedia page — View wikipedia page history |
This page or section uses content from FileFormat.Info. Original article(s) can be found here and here. |
More general information[]
In Unicode, a duplicate of J j for use as a special phonetic character in historical Greek WP linguistics is encoded in the Greek script block as Unicode WP U+037F and as U+03F3. It is used to denote the palatal glide WP /j/ in the context of Greek script. It is called "Yot" in the Unicode standard, after the German name of the letter J j.
Yot (Ϳ ϳ), existing inside the Greek script WP and encoded as Ϳ (Unicode U+037F) and as ϳ (Unicode U+03F3) in the Greek script block of the Unicode standard as a duplicate of J j for use as a special phonetic character in historical Greek WP linguistics, serves as a graphical symbol representing the IPA /j/ palatal approximate phoneme inside the archaic Greek words. It is used to denote the palatal glide /j/ inside the Greek script. It was introduced by the linguists in the nineteenth century on the basis of the J WP j WP letter from the Latin alphabet WP. It is called "Yot" in the Unicode standard, after the anglicized German name of the letter J j. Similar introduction of J j into Cyrillic script WP occurred too in former Yugoslavia. This semi-consonantal sound is corresponding to "i" followed by a vowel (e.g.:"yesterday"). The loss of this phoneme (but not of course the phone) in the ancient Greek occurred already in ancient times. The Ϳ ϳ grapheme is used mostly in historical grammar of ancient Greek, to explain some linguistic phenomena and for reconstructing of several major phonetic and morphological processes.
This page uses CC-BY-SA (Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike F) content from Wikipedia WP | |
View wikipedia page — View wikipedia page history |
This page or section uses content from FileFormat.Info. Original article(s) can be found here and here. |
Unicode[]
The Yot is encoded in Unicode WP as U+037F for the capital letter and as U+03F3 for the non-capital letter.
This page uses CC-BY-SA (Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike F) content from Wikipedia WP | |
View wikipedia page — View wikipedia page history |
This page or section uses content from FileFormat.Info. Original article(s) can be found here and here. |
This page or section uses content from the Unicode Consortium. The original article can be found here. |
Other World ( Future type - Greek alphabet ) servers[]
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All items (4)