Swiss Fonts
Swiss fonts are typefaces that are designed to be used in the languages of Switzerland, which include German, French, Italian, and Romansh. Swiss orthography is the set of rules and standards for writing the languages of Switzerland. It is based on the principles of the German alphabet, but it also incorporates elements of the French and Italian alphabets.
The Swedish alphabet includes standard letters A-Z along with letters Å, Ä, and Ö sorted after Z in the alphabetical order. These three letters are considered separate letters in the Swedish alphabet and are used to represent specific sounds in the Swedish language.
Writing System: Latin script
Alphabetic Writing System: German alphabet
Number of Characters: 26
Alphabet Letter / Character Set: A, a, Ä, ä, B, b, C, c, D, d, E, e, F, f, G, g, H, h, I, i, J, j, K, k, L, l, M, m, N, n, O, o, Ö, ö, P, p, Q, q, R, r, S, s, T, t, U, u, Ü, ü, V, v, W, w, X, x, Y, y, Z, z.
Language Speakers: 5 million
Country / Areas: Germany, also Austria, Belgium, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, and Switzerland
Typeface Usage: Various business typography uses, such as corporate fonts, branding font styles, labels, product, and packaging fonts, high-performing gaming, and app fonts, more wide-use multimedia, and printer-friendly digital fonts, variable fonts for websites, tablets, software fonts, and any other high-grade professional and personal typeface applications.