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by Mr Jeremy Nowers Defence School of Languages, UK

Defence School of Languages, UK BILC Professional Seminar for NATO/PfP countries Monterey, USA 2011. not. ^. When in Rome. ( anised ). An Enquiry into the Standardisation of Foreign Language Fonts. by Mr Jeremy Nowers Defence School of Languages, UK. For Sale Complete Set of

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by Mr Jeremy Nowers Defence School of Languages, UK

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  1. Defence School of Languages, UK BILC Professional Seminar for NATO/PfP countriesMonterey, USA 2011

  2. not ^ When in Rome (anised) An Enquiry into the Standardisation of Foreign Language Fonts by Mr Jeremy Nowers Defence School of Languages, UK

  3. For Sale Complete Set of Edition # 15 – All 32 Volumes Excellent Condition – Nearly New A bargain at £500! Reason for Sale Newly married – Wife knows everything!

  4. Fonts can generate strong emotion: Comic Sans

  5. Relativity, TheSpecialAndGeneralTheory: APopularExposition by AlbertEinstein

  6. E = mc2

  7. Reading ~ Level 1 – Survival 12. Can read very simple connected written material, such as unambiguous texts that are directly related to everyday survival or workplace situations. Texts may include short notes; announcements; highly predictable descriptions of people, places, or things; brief explanations of geography, government, and currency systems simplified for non-natives; short sets of instructions and directions (application forms, maps, menus, directories, brochures, and simple schedules). Understands the basic meaning of simple texts containing high frequency structural patterns and vocabulary, including shared international terms and cognates (when applicable). Can find some specific details through careful or selective reading. Can often guess the meaning of unfamiliar words from simple context. May be able to identify major topics in some higher level texts. However, may misunderstand even some simple texts. NATO STANAG 6001 - Edn #4

  8. Reading ~ Level 2 – Functional 13. Sufficient comprehension to read simple authentic written material on familiar subjects. Can read straightforward, concrete, factual texts, which may include descriptions of persons, places, and things; and narration about current, past, and future events.Contexts include news items describing frequently recurring events, simple biographical information, social notices, routine business letters, and simple technical material intended for the general reader. Can read uncomplicated but authentic prose on familiar subjects that are normally presented in a predictable sequence that aids the reader in understanding. Can locate and understand the main ideas and details in material written for the general reader and can answer factual questions about such texts. Cannot draw inferences directly from the text or understand the subtleties of language surrounding factual material. Can readily understand prose that is predominately constructed in high frequency sentence patterns. While active vocabulary may not be broad, the reader can use contextual and real-world cues to understand texts. May be slow in performing this task, and may misunderstand some information. May be able to summarise, sort, and locate specific information in higher level texts concerning his/her special professional field, but not consistently or reliably. NATO STANAG 6001 - Edn #4

  9. Non Romanised Fonts e.g. Arabic مدرسة اللغات البريطانية العسكرية مدرسة اللغات البريطانية العسكرية مدرسة اللغات البريطانية العسكرية مدرسة اللغات البريطانية العسكرية

  10. مطعم علي بابا مطعم علي بابا

  11. يـوتـيـوب يوتيوب

  12. Non-Romanised / Special Character Fonts Bislama, Norwegian, Portuguese, Romanian, Swedish, Cantonese, Hokkien, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, Amharic, Arabic, Burmese, Cambodian, Georgian, Hebrew, Thai, Tigrinya, Azeri, Dari, Estonian, Farsi, Hungarian, Kazakh, Kirgiz, Lao, Mongolian, Pashto, Tibetan, Turkish, Turkmen, Uzbek, Vietnamese, Albanian, Armenian, Belorussian, Chichewa, Chinyanja, Czech, Greek, Gujarati, Hindi, Kurmanji, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Punjabi, Russian, Siswati, Slovak, Somali, Sorani, Ukrainian, Urdu, Bengali, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Croatian, Macedonian, Montenegrin, Nepali, Serbian, Shona, Sinhalese, Slovene, Swahili, Wolof, Yoruba, Hausa, Icelandic, Indonesian, Malay, Maltese, Sesotho, Tagalog, Tamil, Zulu.

  13. Recommendations for Lower Level Classes • Find out what font the tutor is using in class • Make a recommendation, where necessary • Check that the font is loaded onto the PC’s folder • If upgrading to a new operating system, make sure the fonts you use are included in the package • Check that the exam publishers are using the same font

  14. Invitation For those of you who may be interested in the issues of non-Romanised font standardisation, let us form an e-working group to establish and disseminate an agreed list of recommended fonts, for all non-Romanised languages of interest

  15. Know Your Fonts, otherwise………..!

  16. Questions?

  17. not When^in Rome(anised) For information about this presentation, please contact: Jeremy Nowers UK BILC Secretary & OC LAPS, Defence School of Languages, UK Office Email: Office tel/fax: DSL Website: la1-dsl@agctg.mod.uk 0044 (0) 1494 683362 www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/AboutDefence/WhatWeDo/TrainingandExercises/DSL

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