On 5/10/20 7:39 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote: > The @t{} trick was to avoid converting ' into ’, which is definitely > not how this word should be displayed. bahai.org disagrees; see below. >> The preferred Unicode spelling these days is “Baháʼí” (with U+02BC MODIFIED >> LETTER APOSTROPHE). > > Is that official? Can you tell where you saw that this is the > preferred spelling? I got it from Wikipedia. :-) I looked into it more. There’s nothing official as far as Bahá’í and Unicode goes, as far as I could find. The Bahá’í main website bahai.org spells it “Bahá’í” (with U+2019 RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK). Its style guide complains, “Bahá’í, Bahá’u’lláh, and other names are written with accent marks, but many publications and Web sites do not have the facility for using such marks.”[1] without saying whether the accent marks used on its own website are correct or have been bowdlerized in order to cater to browsers lacking U+02BC MODIFIER LETTER APOSTROPHE. Certainly bahai.org is doing bowdlerization; for example, their calendar page[2] uses ‘Sharaf’ to display “S͟haraf”, even though Unicode says it should instead use U+035F COMBINING DOUBLE MACRON BELOW between the “S” and the “h”; here the web page is understandably bowdlerizing because too many browsers (Emacs included) don't render the Unicode “S͟haraf” well. Getting back to the hamzah (the apostrophe-like character in question), here’s how other sources represent it in Latin transliterations: ' U+0027 - ArabTeX (presumably because it displays as U+2019 in TeX) ʼ U+02BC - Library of Congress, various geographic names standards (UN, US, UK), Hans Wehr ʾ U+02BE - Deutsches Institut für Normung, Encyclopaedia of Islam ˈ U+02C8 - ISO Presumably English Wikipedia uses U+02BC because of UN/US/UK/LoC. That being said, bahai.org is as definitive as it gets on the web for Bahá’ís; if that website uses U+2019 to represent hamzah, we’re in good company and can mostly stick with what we’ve got. Proposed patch attached. [1] https://news.bahai.org/media-information/style-guide/ [2] https://www.bahai.org/library/other-literature/publications-individual-authors/bahaullah-new-era/bahaullah-new-era.xhtml