bello
concept
concept
tour
tour
Bello_words
Bello words
ligatures
ligatures
how_does_it_work
how does it work
figures
figures
swashes
swashes
font_formats
font formats
webfonts
webfonts
character_set
character set
making_of
making of
PDF
PDF
supplements
supplements
Estonian
1.100.000 speakers
12 language specific characters
ISO 639 code: est
diacritics
(‰ based on 107.237.548 letters)
sample text

Ära ole kägu, kui sa oled kärbsenäpp.Ära ole ei ööbik ega kärbsenäpp, kui oled koer. Kuid igaüks võib teha häält. Meie oleme Underware.

Estonian is an Finno-Ugric language closely related to Finnish spoken by about 1.1 million people in Estonia. The main difference between Estonian and Finnish is that Finnish has a lot of loan words from Swedish, while Estonian contains many words of German origin, plus some words from Russian, Latin, Greek and English. There is considerable mutual intelligibility between Estonian and Finnish.
The oldest examples of written Estonian are names, words, and phrases found in early 13th century chronicles. The earliest surviving longer text dates from the 16th century. An Estonian textbook first appeared in 1637. Ferdinand Johann Wiedemann published the comprehensive Estonian-German dictionary in 1869, and a grammar describing the Estonian language in 1875.
source
wikipedia.org, omniglot.com, evertype.com & ethnologue.com