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Sample Usage & HistoryBasic Features
Character index (Letters Combining marks Numbers Punctuation Separator & other)
Phonology (Vowel soundsConsonant sounds)
Structure (Vowel harmonyGlyphs vs. phonemesSpelling vs. pronunciation)
Vowels (Basic vowels Suffixes Final vowel separation)
Consonants (Basic Mongolian consonantsQA and GARepertoire extension 
Consonants for other languagesConsonant clusters & gemination)
Combining marks Numbers Text direction (In horizontal contexts)
Glyph shaping & positioning (Cursive shapingContext-based shaping
Context-based positioningFont stylesBaselines & inline alignment)
Punctuation & inline features (Grapheme boundariesWord boundaries
Phrase & section boundariesParentheses & bracketsQuotations
Emphasis Abbreviation, ellipsis & repetitionInline notes & annotations
Other inline rangesOther punctuation)
Line & paragraph layout (Line breaking & hyphenationText alignment & justification
Letter spacingCounters, lists, etc.Styling initials
Page & book layout (General page layout & progressionForms & user interaction
Page numbering, running headers, etc.)
Languages using the Mongolian scriptOnline resourcesReferences

Sources of confusion

As Richard Ishida writes: “Unicode encodes separate characters for different sounds for the Mongolian language, regardless of whether the glyph shapes used are identical. The result of this encoding method is that it is impossible to accurately copy Mongolian text from a visual source unless you speak the language well enough to recognise the phonetics of the words involved. It also leads to mistakes when Mongolian speakers type text.” Just by looking at a character you cannot be certain what the signified phoneme is. And one glyph shape may hide one of two different character codes.

Furthermore, Mongolian orthography, at least in the Mongolian script (not in the Cyrillic script), reflects an archaic pronunciation even if the written Mongolian text is supposed to represent a modern utterance. “For example, if you were to spell out the letters in the following word as written you would get uʤəgulxu, whereas the modern pronunciation is uʤuuləx.” (Richard Ishida)

Fonts

Microsoft Windows 10 comes bundled with one dedicated Mongolian font, Mongolian Baiti.

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