Samples of simulation typefaces

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A simulation typeface is one designed after a unique or stereotypical aspect of the letterforms or scripts of a different language.[1][2][3]

Name Example 1 Example 2 Example 3
Bagel (typeface) (Hebrew/Latin) 199px
Circumcision (typeface) (Hebrew/Latin) 199px
Faux Arabic (Arabic/Latin) 199px
Faux Chinese (Chinese/Latin) 199px
Faux Hebrew (Hebrew/Latin) Faux Hebrew.png
Faux Sanskrit (Devanagari/Latin) 199px
Hananiah (typeface) (Hebrew/Latin) 199px
Herculanum (typeface) 199px
Lithos (Greek epigraphic/Latin) 199px
Rusticana 199px 199px
Samarkan (typeface) (Devanagari/Latin) 199px
Sherwood (typeface) 199px
Skia (typeface) (Greek epigraphic/Latin) 199px 199px Skiaspecimen3.svg
Talmud (typeface) (Hebrew/Latin) 199px

See also

References

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  1. Tereza Haralambous and Yannis Haralambous, "Characters, Glyphs and Beyond", Glyph and Typesetting Workshop, Kyōto, 2003. PDF, p. 24
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