On 5/7/15, Apostolos Syropoulos <asyropou...@yahoo.com> wrote: > That is correct Jonathan. In fact the general rule is that a σ at the end of > a word becomes always a ς. The only exception is when the final vowel is > cut due to a grammatical phenomenon that occurs is the following: > > σώσ' τα (save them)
This case seems really hard to detect. The Unicode definition (that a sigma is final if the last non-Case_Ignorable character is Cased and the next is not) wrongly considers the second sigma in your example as a final sigma. Perhaps we need an explicit way to say that a given sigma is final or not. Bruno -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex