karawynn ([info]karawynn) wrote,
@ 2008-04-05 11:35:00
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invert
˙˙˙ ʞɔıɹʇ s,ןooɟ ןıɹdɐ ʇɐǝɹƃ ɐ uǝǝq ǝʌɐɥ pןnoʍ sıɥʇ


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[info]greyduck72
2008-04-05 06:44 pm UTC (link)
Whoah. I must know the secret of this trick. Please?

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[info]szasz
2008-04-05 07:56 pm UTC (link)
Unicode character sets contain a lot of things that either are or look like upside-down Latin letters. Apparently they're used in phonetic spellings, since that's the category they appear in on my Macintosh's "Character Palette." They're called "turned" characters, and there ought to be a way to generate them on most systems. Of course not all letters need to have a turned form: her upside-down "u" above is just a regular old "n".

¿ɥnɥ ןooƆ

Edited at 2008-04-05 07:58 pm UTC

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[info]karawynn
2008-04-05 09:33 pm UTC (link)
the easy way:

http://www.sevenwires.com/play/UpsideDownLetters.html

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[info]szasz
2008-04-06 04:50 am UTC (link)
Why, why... that's just CHEATING. :)

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[info]szasz
2008-04-05 07:41 pm UTC (link)
...except for the descenders on the upside-down t's. :)

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[info]karawynn
2008-04-05 09:37 pm UTC (link)
depends what font you're reading in. the 't' in arial looks odd, but verdana and trebuchet both do very well.

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[info]szasz
2008-04-05 09:39 pm UTC (link)
So it does! (I use Tahoma in my browser.)

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[info]prodigal
2008-04-05 10:39 pm UTC (link)
How did you do that?

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