1# © 2016 and later: Unicode, Inc. and others. 2# License & terms of use: http://www.unicode.org/copyright.html#License 3# 4# File: Latin_ConjoiningJamo.txt 5# Generated from CLDR 6# 7 8# Follows the Ministry of Culture and Tourism romanization: see http://www.korea.net/korea/kor_loca.asp?code=A020303 9# http://www.unicode.org/cldr/transliteration_guidelines.html#Korean 10#- N.B. DO NOT put any filters, NFD, etc. here -- those are aliased in 11#- the INDEX file. This transliterator is, by itself, not 12#- instantiated. It is used as a part of Latin-Jamo, Latin-Hangul, or 13#- inverses thereof. 14# Transliteration from Latin characters to Korean script is done in 15# two steps: Latin to Jamo, then Jamo to Hangul. The Jamo-Hangul 16# transliteration is done algorithmically following Unicode 3.0 17# section 3.11. This file implements the Latin to Jamo 18# transliteration using rules. 19# Jamo occupy the block 1100-11FF. Within this block there are three 20# groups of characters: initial consonants or choseong (I), medial 21# vowels or jungseong (M), and trailing consonants or jongseong (F). 22# Standard Korean syllables are of the form I+M+F*. 23# Section 3.11 describes the use of 'filler' jamo to convert 24# nonstandard syllables to standard form: the choseong filler 115F and 25# the junseong filler 1160. In this transliterator, we will not use 26# 115F or 1160. 27# We will, however, insert two 'null' jamo to make foreign words 28# conform to Korean syllable structure. These are the null initial 29# consonant 110B (IEUNG) and the null vowel 1173 (EU). In Latin text, 30# we will use the separator in order to disambiguate strings, 31# e.g. "kan-ggan" (initial GG) vs. "kanggan" (final NG + initial G). 32# We will not use all of the characters in the jamo block. We will 33# only use the 19 initials, 21 medials, and 27 finals possessing a 34# jamo short name as defined in section 4.4 of the Unicode book. 35# Rules of thumb. These guidelines provide the basic framework 36# for the rules. They are phrased in terms of Latin-Jamo transliteration. 37# The Jamo-Latin rules derive from these, since the Jamo-Latin rules are 38# just context-free transliteration of jamo to corresponding short names, 39# with the addition of separators to maintain round-trip integrity 40# in the context of the Latin-Jamo rules. 41# A sequence of vowels: 42# - Take the longest sequence you can. If there are too many, or you don't 43# have a starting consonant, introduce a 110B necessary. 44# A sequence of consonants. 45# - First join the double consonants: G + G -→ GG 46# - In the remaining list, 47# -- If there is no preceding vowel, take the first consonant, and insert EU 48# after it. Continue with the rest of the consonants. 49# -- If there is one consonant, attach to the following vowel 50# -- If there are two consonants and a following vowel, attach one to the 51# preceeding vowel, and one to the following vowel. 52# -- If there are more than two consonants, join the first two together if you 53# can: L + G =→ LG 54# -- If you still end up with more than 2 consonants, insert EU after the 55# first one, and continue with the rest of the consonants. 56#---------------------------------------------------------------------- 57# Variables 58# Some latin consonants or consonant pairs only occur as initials, and 59# some only as finals, but some occur as both. This makes some jamo 60# consonants ambiguous when transliterated into latin. 61# Initial only: IEUNG BB DD JJ R 62# Final only: BS GS L LB LG LH LM LP LS LT NG NH NJ 63# Initial and Final: B C D G GG H J K M N P S SS T 64$Gi = ᄀ; 65$KKi = ᄁ; 66$Ni = ᄂ; 67$Di = ᄃ; 68$TTi = ᄄ; 69$Li = ᄅ; 70$Mi = ᄆ; 71$Bi = ᄇ; 72$PPi = ᄈ; 73$Si = ᄉ; 74$SSi = ᄊ; 75$IEUNG = ᄋ; # null initial, inserted during Latin-Jamo 76$Ji = ᄌ; 77$JJi = ᄍ; 78$CHi = ᄎ; 79$Ki = ᄏ; 80$Ti = ᄐ; 81$Pi = ᄑ; 82$Hi = ᄒ; 83$A = ᅡ; 84$AE = ᅢ; 85$YA = ᅣ; 86$YAE = ᅤ; 87$EO = ᅥ; 88$E = ᅦ; 89$YEO = ᅧ; 90$YE = ᅨ; 91$O = ᅩ; 92$WA = ᅪ; 93$WAE = ᅫ; 94$OE = ᅬ; 95$YO = ᅭ; 96$U = ᅮ; 97$WO = ᅯ; 98$WE = ᅰ; 99$WI = ᅱ; 100$YU = ᅲ; 101$EU = ᅳ; # null medial, inserted during Latin-Jamo 102$UI = ᅴ; 103$I = ᅵ; 104$Gf = ᆨ; 105$GGf = ᆩ; 106$GS = ᆪ; 107$Nf = ᆫ; 108$NJ = ᆬ; 109$NH = ᆭ; 110$Df = ᆮ; 111$L = ᆯ; 112$LG = ᆰ; 113$LM = ᆱ; 114$LB = ᆲ; 115$LS = ᆳ; 116$LT = ᆴ; 117$LP = ᆵ; 118$LH = ᆶ; 119$Mf = ᆷ; 120$Bf = ᆸ; 121$BS = ᆹ; 122$Sf = ᆺ; 123$SSf = ᆻ; 124$NG = ᆼ; 125$Jf = ᆽ; 126$Cf = ᆾ; 127$Kf = ᆿ; 128$Tf = ᇀ; 129$Pf = ᇁ; 130$Hf = ᇂ; 131$jamoInitial = [ᄀ-ᄒ]; 132$jamoMedial = [ᅡ-ᅵ]; 133$latinInitial = [bcdghjklmnprst]; 134# Any character in the latin transliteration of a medial 135$latinMedial = [aeiouwy]; 136# The last character of the latin transliteration of a medial 137$latinMedialEnd = [aeiou]; 138# Disambiguation separator 139$sep = \-; 140#---------------------------------------------------------------------- 141# Jamo-Latin 142# 143# Jamo to latin is relatively simple, since it is the latin that is 144# ambiguous. Most rules are straightforward, and we encode them below 145# as simple add-on back rule, e.g.: 146# $jamoMedial {bs} → $BS; 147# becomes 148# $jamoMedial {bs} ↔ $BS; 149# 150# Furthermore, we don't care about the ordering for Jamo-Latin because 151# we are going from single characters, so we can very easily piggyback 152# on the Latin-Jamo. 153# 154# The main issue with Jamo-Latin is when to insert separators. 155# Separators are inserted to obtain correct round trip behavior. For 156# example, the sequence Ki A Gf Gi E, if transliterated to "kagge", 157# would then round trip to Ki A GGi E. To prevent this, we insert a 158# separator: "kag-ge". IMPORTANT: The need for separators depends 159# very specifically on the behavior of the Latin-Jamo rules. A change 160# in the Latin-Jamo behavior can completely change the way the 161# separator insertion must be done. 162# First try to preserve actual separators in the jamo text by doubling 163# them. This fixes problems like: 164# (Di)(A)(Ji)(U)(NG)-(IEUNG)(YEO)(Nf)(Gi)(YEO)(L) =→ dajung-yeongyeol 165# =→ (Di)(A)(Ji)(U)(NG)(IEUNG)(YEO)(Nf)(Gi)(YEO)(L). This is optional 166# -- if we don't care about losing separators in the jamo, we can delete 167# this rule. 168$sep $sep ↔ $sep; 169# Triple consonants. For three consonants "axxx" we insert a 170# separator between the first and second "x" if XXf, Xf, and Xi all 171# exist, and we have A Xf XXi. This prevents the reverse 172# transliteration to A XXf Xi. 173$sep ← $latinMedialEnd s {} $SSi; 174# For vowels the rule is similar. If there is a vowel "ae" such that 175# "a" by itself and "e" by itself are vowels, then we want to map A E 176# to "a-e" so as not to round trip to AE. However, in the text Ki EO 177# IEUNG E we don't need to map to "keo-e". "keoe" suffices. For 178# vowels of the form "aei", both "ae" + "i" and "a" + "ei" must be 179# tested. NOTE: These rules used to have a left context of 180# $latinInitial instead of [^$latinMedial]. The problem with this is 181# sequences where an initial IEUNG is transliterated away: 182# (IEUNG)(A)(IEUNG)(EO) =→ aeo =→ (IEUNG)(AE)(IEUNG)(O) 183# Also problems in cases like gayeo, which needs to be gaye-o 184# The hard case is a chain, like aeoeu. Normally interpreted as ae oe u. So for a-eoeu, we have to insert $sep 185# But, we don't insert between the o and the e. 186# 187# a ae 188# e eo eu 189# i 190# o oe 191# u 192# ui 193# wa wae we wi 194# yae ya yeo ye yo yu 195# These are simple, since they can't chain. Note that we don't handle extreme cases like [ga][eo][e][o] 196$sep ← a {} [$E $EO $EU]; 197$sep ← [^aow] e {} [$O $OE]; 198$sep ← [^aowy] e {} [$U $UI]; 199$sep ← [^ey] o {} [$E $EO $EU]; 200$sep ← [^y] u {} [$I]; 201# Similar to the above, but with an intervening $IEUNG. 202$sep ← [^$latinMedial] [y] e {} $IEUNG [$O $OE]; 203$sep ← [^$latinMedial] e {} $IEUNG [$O $OE $U]; 204$sep ← [^$latinMedial] [o a] {} $IEUNG [$E $EO $EU]; 205$sep ← [^$latinMedial] [w y] a {} $IEUNG [$E $EO $EU]; 206# Single finals followed by IEUNG. The jamo sequence A Xf IEUNG E, 207# where Xi also exists, must be transliterated as "ax-e" to prevent 208# the round trip conversion to A Xi E. 209$sep ← $latinMedialEnd b {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 210$sep ← $latinMedialEnd d {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 211$sep ← $latinMedialEnd g {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 212$sep ← $latinMedialEnd h {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 213$sep ← $latinMedialEnd j {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 214$sep ← $latinMedialEnd k {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 215$sep ← $latinMedialEnd m {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 216$sep ← $latinMedialEnd n {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 217$sep ← $latinMedialEnd p {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 218$sep ← $latinMedialEnd s {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 219$sep ← $latinMedialEnd t {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 220$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 221# Double finals followed by IEUNG. Similar to the single finals 222# followed by IEUNG. Any latin consonant pair X Y, between medials, 223# that we would split by Latin-Jamo, we must handle when it occurs as 224# part of A XYf IEUNG E, to prevent round trip conversion to A Xf Yi E 225$sep ← $latinMedialEnd b s {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 226$sep ← $latinMedialEnd k k {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 227$sep ← $latinMedialEnd g s {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 228$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l b {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 229$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l g {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 230$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l h {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 231$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l m {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 232$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l p {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 233$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l s {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 234$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l t {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 235$sep ← $latinMedialEnd n g {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 236$sep ← $latinMedialEnd n h {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 237$sep ← $latinMedialEnd n j {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 238$sep ← $latinMedialEnd s s {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 239$sep ← $latinMedialEnd ch {} $IEUNG $jamoMedial; 240# Split doubles. Text of the form A Xi Xf E, where XXi also occurs, 241# we transliterate as "ax-xe" to prevent round trip transliteration as 242# A XXi E. 243$sep ← $latinMedialEnd j {} $Ji $jamoMedial; 244$sep ← $latinMedialEnd k {} $Ki $jamoMedial; 245$sep ← $latinMedialEnd s {} $Si $jamoMedial; 246# XYY. This corresponds to the XYY rule in Latin-Jamo. By default 247# Latin-Jamo maps "xyy" to Xf YYi, to keep YY together. As a result, 248# "xyy" forms that correspond to XYf Yi must be transliterated as 249# "xy-y". 250$sep ← $latinMedialEnd b s {} [$Si $SSi]; 251$sep ← $latinMedialEnd g s {} [$Si $SSi]; 252$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l b {} [$Bi]; 253$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l g {} [$Gi]; 254$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l s {} [$Si $SSi]; 255$sep ← $latinMedialEnd n g {} [$Gi]; 256$sep ← $latinMedialEnd n j {} [$Ji $JJi]; 257# $sep ← $latinMedialEnd l {} [$PPi]; 258# $sep ← $latinMedialEnd l {} [$TTi]; 259$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l p {} [$Pi]; 260$sep ← $latinMedialEnd l t {} [$Ti]; 261$sep ← $latinMedialEnd k {} [$KKi $Ki]; 262$sep ← $latinMedialEnd p {} $Pi; 263$sep ← $latinMedialEnd t {} $Ti; 264$sep ← $latinMedialEnd c {} [$Hi]; 265# Deletion of IEUNG is handled below. 266#---------------------------------------------------------------------- 267# Latin-Jamo 268# [Basic, context-free Jamo-Latin rules are embedded here too. See 269# above.] 270# Split digraphs: Text of the form 'axye', where 'xy' is a final 271# digraph, 'x' is a final (by itself), 'y' is an initial, and 'a' and 272# 'e' are medials, we want to transliterate this as A Xf Yi E rather 273# than A XYf IEUNG E. We do NOT include text of the form "axxe", 274# since that is handled differently below. These rules are generated 275# programmatically from the jamo data. 276$jamoMedial {b s} $latinMedial → $Bf $Si; 277$jamoMedial {g s} $latinMedial → $Gf $Si; 278$jamoMedial {l b} $latinMedial → $L $Bi; 279$jamoMedial {l g} $latinMedial → $L $Gi; 280$jamoMedial {l h} $latinMedial → $L $Hi; 281$jamoMedial {l m} $latinMedial → $L $Mi; 282$jamoMedial {l p} $latinMedial → $L $Pi; 283$jamoMedial {l s} $latinMedial → $L $Si; 284$jamoMedial {l t} $latinMedial → $L $Ti; 285$jamoMedial {n g} $latinMedial → $Nf $Gi; 286$jamoMedial {n h} $latinMedial → $Nf $Hi; 287$jamoMedial {n j} $latinMedial → $Nf $Ji; 288# Single consonants are initials: Text of the form 'axe', where 'x' 289# can be an initial or a final, and 'a' and 'e' are medials, we want 290# to transliterate as A Xi E rather than A Xf IEUNG E. 291$jamoMedial {b} $latinMedial → $Bi; 292$jamoMedial {ch} $latinMedial → $CHi; 293$jamoMedial {d} $latinMedial → $Di; 294$jamoMedial {g} $latinMedial → $Gi; 295$jamoMedial {h} $latinMedial → $Hi; 296$jamoMedial {j} $latinMedial → $Ji; 297$jamoMedial {k} $latinMedial → $Ki; 298$jamoMedial {m} $latinMedial → $Mi; 299$jamoMedial {n} $latinMedial → $Ni; 300$jamoMedial {p} $latinMedial → $Pi; 301$jamoMedial {s} $latinMedial → $Si; 302$jamoMedial {t} $latinMedial → $Ti; 303$jamoMedial {l} $latinMedial → $Li; 304# Doubled initials. The sequence "axxe", where XX exists as an initial 305# (XXi), and also Xi and Xf exist (true of all digraphs XX), we want 306# to transliterate as A XXi E, rather than split to A Xf Xi E. 307$jamoMedial {p p} $latinMedial → $PPi; 308$jamoMedial {t t} $latinMedial → $TTi; 309$jamoMedial {j j} $latinMedial → $JJi; 310$jamoMedial {k k} $latinMedial → $KKi; 311$jamoMedial {s s} $latinMedial → $SSi; 312# XYY. Because doubled consonants bind more strongly than XY 313# consonants, we must handle the sequence "axyy" specially. Here XYf 314# and YYi must exist. In these cases, we map to Xf YYi rather than 315# XYf. 316# However, there are two special cases. 317$jamoMedial {lp} p p → $LP; 318$jamoMedial {lt} t t → $LT; 319# End special cases 320$jamoMedial {b} s s → $Bf; 321$jamoMedial {g} s s → $Gf; 322$jamoMedial {l} b b → $L; 323$jamoMedial {l} g g → $L; 324$jamoMedial {l} s s → $L; 325$jamoMedial {l} t t → $L; 326$jamoMedial {l} p p → $L; 327$jamoMedial {n} g g → $Nf; 328$jamoMedial {n} j j → $Nf; 329# Finals: Attach consonant with preceding medial to preceding medial. 330# Do this BEFORE mapping consonants to initials. Longer keys must 331# precede shorter keys that they start with, e.g., the rule for 'bs' 332# must precede 'b'. 333# [BASIC Jamo-Latin FINALS handled here. Order irrelevant within this 334# block for Jamo-Latin.] 335$jamoMedial {bs} ↔ $BS; 336$jamoMedial {b} ↔ $Bf; 337$jamoMedial {ch} ↔ $Cf; 338$jamoMedial {c} → $Cf; 339$jamoMedial {d} ↔ $Df; 340$jamoMedial {kk} ↔ $GGf; 341$jamoMedial {gs} ↔ $GS; 342$jamoMedial {g} ↔ $Gf; 343$jamoMedial {h} ↔ $Hf; 344$jamoMedial {j} ↔ $Jf; 345$jamoMedial {k} ↔ $Kf; 346$jamoMedial {lb} ↔ $LB; $jamoMedial {lg} ↔ $LG; 347$jamoMedial {lh} ↔ $LH; 348$jamoMedial {lm} ↔ $LM; 349$jamoMedial {lp} ↔ $LP; 350$jamoMedial {ls} ↔ $LS; 351$jamoMedial {lt} ↔ $LT; 352$jamoMedial {l} ↔ $L; 353$jamoMedial {m} ↔ $Mf; 354$jamoMedial {ng} ↔ $NG; 355$jamoMedial {nh} ↔ $NH; 356$jamoMedial {nj} ↔ $NJ; 357$jamoMedial {n} ↔ $Nf; 358$jamoMedial {p} ↔ $Pf; 359$jamoMedial {ss} ↔ $SSf; 360$jamoMedial {s} ↔ $Sf; 361$jamoMedial {t} ↔ $Tf; 362# Initials: Attach single consonant to following medial. Do this 363# AFTER mapping finals. Longer keys must precede shorter keys that 364# they start with, e.g., the rule for 'gg' must precede 'g'. 365# [BASIC Jamo-Latin INITIALS handled here. Order irrelevant within 366# this block for Jamo-Latin.] 367{kk} $latinMedial ↔ $KKi; 368{g} $latinMedial ↔ $Gi; 369{n} $latinMedial ↔ $Ni; 370{tt} $latinMedial ↔ $TTi; 371{d} $latinMedial ↔ $Di; 372{l} $latinMedial ↔ $Li; 373{m} $latinMedial ↔ $Mi; 374{pp} $latinMedial ↔ $PPi; 375{b} $latinMedial ↔ $Bi; 376{ss} $latinMedial ↔ $SSi; 377{s} $latinMedial ↔ $Si; 378{jj} $latinMedial ↔ $JJi; 379{j} $latinMedial ↔ $Ji; 380{ch} $latinMedial ↔ $CHi; 381{c} $latinMedial → $CHi; 382{k} $latinMedial ↔ $Ki; 383{t} $latinMedial ↔ $Ti; 384{p} $latinMedial ↔ $Pi; 385{h} $latinMedial ↔ $Hi; 386# 'r' in final position. Because of the equivalency of the 'l' and 387# 'r' jamo (the glyphs are the same), we try to provide the same 388# equivalency in Latin-Jamo. The 'l' to 'r' conversion is handled 389# below. If we see an 'r' in an apparent final position, treat it 390# like 'l'. For example, "karka" =→ Ki A R EU Ki A without this rule. 391# Instead, we want Ki A L Ki A. 392# Initial + Final: If we match the next rule, we have initial then 393# final consonant with no intervening medial. We insert the null 394# vowel BEFORE it to create a well-formed syllable. (In the next rule 395# we insert a null vowel AFTER an anomalous initial.) 396# Initial + X: This block matches an initial consonant not followed by 397# a medial. We insert the null vowel after it. We handle double 398# initials explicitly here; for single initial consonants we insert EU 399# (as Latin) after them and let standard rules do the rest. 400# BREAKS ROUND TRIP INTEGRITY 401kk → $KKi $EU; 402tt → $TTi $EU; 403pp → $PPi $EU; 404ss → $SSi $EU; 405jj → $JJi $EU; 406ch → $CHi $EU; 407([lbdghjkmnpst]) → | $1 eu; 408# X + Final: Finally we have to deal with a consonant that can only be 409# interpreted as a final (not an initial) and which is preceded 410# neither by an initial nor a medial. It is the start of the 411# syllable, but cannot be. Most of these will already be handled by 412# the above rules. 'bs' splits into Bi EU Sf. Similar for 'gs' 'ng' 413# 'nh' 'nj'. The only problem is 'l' and digraphs starting with 'l'. 414# For this isolated case, we could add a null initial and medial, 415# which would give "la" =→ IEUNG EU L IEUNG A, for example. A more 416# economical solution is to transliterate isolated "l" (that is, 417# initial "l") to "r". (Other similar conversions of consonants that 418# occur neither as initials nor as finals are handled below.) 419l → | r; 420# Medials. If a medial is preceded by an initial, then we proceed 421# normally. As usual, longer keys must precede shorter ones. 422# [BASIC Jamo-Latin MEDIALS handled here. Order irrelevant within 423# this block for Jamo-Latin.] 424# 425# a e i o u 426# ae 427# eo eu 428# oe 429# ui 430# wa we wi 431# wae 432# yae ya yeo ye yo yu 433$jamoInitial {ae} ↔ $AE; 434$jamoInitial {a} ↔ $A; 435$jamoInitial {eo} ↔ $EO; 436$jamoInitial {eu} ↔ $EU; 437$jamoInitial {e} ↔ $E; 438$jamoInitial {i} ↔ $I; 439$jamoInitial {oe} ↔ $OE; 440$jamoInitial {o} ↔ $O; 441$jamoInitial {ui} ↔ $UI; 442$jamoInitial {u} ↔ $U; 443$jamoInitial {wae} ↔ $WAE; 444$jamoInitial {wa} ↔ $WA; 445$jamoInitial {wo} ↔ $WO; 446$jamoInitial {we} ↔ $WE; 447$jamoInitial {wi} ↔ $WI; 448$jamoInitial {yae} ↔ $YAE; 449$jamoInitial {ya} ↔ $YA; 450$jamoInitial {yeo} ↔ $YEO; 451$jamoInitial {ye} ↔ $YE; 452$jamoInitial {yo} ↔ $YO; 453$jamoInitial {yu} ↔ $YU; 454# We may see an anomalous isolated 'w' or 'y'. In that case, we 455# interpret it as 'wi' and 'yu', respectively. 456# BREAKS ROUND TRIP INTEGRITY 457$jamoInitial {w} → | wi; 458$jamoInitial {y} → | yu; 459# Otherwise, insert a null consonant IEUNG before the medial (which is 460# still an untransliterated latin vowel). 461($latinMedial) → $IEUNG | $1; 462# Convert non-jamo latin consonants to equivalents. These occur as 463# neither initials nor finals in jamo. 'l' occurs as a final, but not 464# an initial; it is handled above. The following letters (left hand 465# side) will never be output by Jamo-Latin. 466f → | p; 467q → | k; 468v → | b; 469x → | ks; 470z → | s; 471r → | l; 472c → | k; 473# Delete separators (Latin-Jamo). 474$sep → ; 475# Delete null consonants (Jamo-Latin). Do NOT delete null EU vowels, 476# since these may also occur in text. 477← $IEUNG; 478#- N.B. DO NOT put any filters, NFD, etc. here -- those are aliased in 479#- the INDEX file. This transliterator is, by itself, not 480#- instantiated. It is used as a part of Latin-Jamo, Latin-Hangul, or 481#- inverses thereof. 482# eof 483 484