Rather than being the same characters with a particular "style" applied. It is already explained, those fancy characters are actually separate characters. But, if you copy ???? ???? then it will actually copy the "style" that those characters appear to have. and expect the font to be "transferred" along with the characters. This is the reason that you can't copy and paste the text you're reading right now into a social media website. But it doesn't change the actual characters at all. The font transforms the style of the characters. It is regular characters like the ones you're reading right now. We have collected together into a set that sort of resembles an alphabet. Of course, many of the above fonts aren't proper character sets. So that's how we ended up with all these funky text fonts. For example, full-width Latin characters to supplement the full-width Japanese characters. Some character sets are country-specific that required them to communicate. They wanted to be able to express their equations and formulae in their documents. Some of these character sets are for mathematicians, linguists, and other academics. This looks like the alphabet on your keyboard. Well, amongst these tens-of-thousands of other characters are actually whole character sets. Generate bold/italic/fancy text that can be copy-pasted away from this site and into another one. There are a bunch more characters than the ones on your keyboard.
Each year the Unicode standard grows to incorporate more characters - and emojis! That's right, emojis are actually textual characters! This is a perfect online website to have a keyboard that had keys which were for emojis. But then Unicode introduces and that supports an unlimited number of characters. There are actually tens of thousands of characters! No joke, there were 128 characters.
Your keyboard has only about 100 characters on it because it can't fit any more. As your typing keyboard is hiding characters from you. To get your own copy of the chart he is using in the video, click here.Here is the brief explanation that how does Phonetic Symbols Text work. The video below from Alexander Arguelles explains this in more detail, and provides an in-depth overview of the International Phonetic Alphabet. The sound often represented by 'th' in English is a good example of this. When it comes to different languages, those differences become even greater, and there may even be sounds that don't exist in your mother tongue. Think of your own accent: what does it sound like? Now think of someone from Mexico City: how does their accent compare to yours? And how about someone from Yucatan? How is their accent different? In each of these versions of Mexican Spanish there is a similar, but slightly different, set of sounds. We all grow up listening to specific set of sounds - these vary not only according to the language we speak, but also according to the region we are from. An important step to reaching a 'convincing' accent is to know what we are aiming for. We probably don't expect to sound like a native speaker but, at least most of us, would like to sound as close to one as possible.
As we learn a foreign language, I think we all aspire to having a 'good' accent.