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groff
ms retains some legacy features solely to support
formatting of historical documents; contemporary ones should not use
them because they can render poorly. See the groff_char(7)
man page.
AT&T ms defined accent mark strings as follows.
'
]Apply acute accent to subsequent glyph.
`
]Apply grave accent to subsequent glyph.
Apply dieresis (umlaut) to subsequent glyph.
Apply circumflex accent to subsequent glyph.
Apply tilde accent to subsequent glyph.
Apply caron to subsequent glyph.
Apply cedilla to subsequent glyph.
Berkeley ms offered an AM
macro; calling it redefined the
AT&T accent mark strings (except for ‘\*C’), applied them to the
preceding glyph, and defined additional strings, some for spacing
glyphs.
Enable alternative accent mark and glyph-producing strings.
'
]Apply acute accent to preceding glyph.
`
]Apply grave accent to preceding glyph.
Apply dieresis (umlaut) to preceding glyph.
Apply circumflex accent to preceding glyph.
Apply tilde accent to preceding glyph.
Apply cedilla to preceding glyph.
Apply stroke (slash) to preceding glyph.
Apply caron to preceding glyph.
Apply macron to preceding glyph.
Apply underdot to preceding glyph.
Apply ring accent to preceding glyph.
Interpolate inverted question mark.
Interpolate inverted exclamation mark.
Interpolate small letter sharp s.
Interpolate small letter o with hook accent (ogonek).
Interpolate small letter yogh.
Interpolate small letter eth.
Interpolate capital letter eth.
Interpolate small letter thorn.
Interpolate capital letter thorn.
Interpolate small æ ligature.
Interpolate capital Æ ligature.
Interpolate small oe ligature.
Interpolate capital OE ligature.
Next: ms Naming Conventions, Previous: Differences from AT&T ms, Up: ms [Contents][Index]