Anonymous ID: 8f9b72 May 2, 2018, 5:51 a.m. No.1271151   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1178

>>1271034

Is this your own FTP or something?

 

For shits and giggles I dumped a Q post (#128 - first mirror post) into a mirror engine, this is what came out, doesn't look like anything at the outset:

 

Tɿiq ɒbbɘb.

[Ɔ]ooɿbinɒƚɘb ɘʇʇoɿƚ ƚo miƨbiɿɘɔƚ.

Ꭾuibɘ ƚo ɿɘɒbinǫ ƚʜɘ ɔɿumdƨ nɘɔɘƨƨɒɿy ƚo ɔonƚ[I]nuɘ.

Aƚƚɒɔʜɘb ǫɿ[A]qʜiɔ iƨ ɔoɿɿɘɔƚ.

⅃inʞɘb ǫɿɒqʜiɔƨ ɒɿɘ inɔoɿɿɘɔƚ ɒnb ʇɒlƨɘ.

Ꭾɿɒqʜiɔ iƨ nɘɔɘƨƨɒɿy ɒnb viƚɒl.

Timɘ ƨƚɒmq(ƨ) ɒnb oɿbɘɿ [iƨ] ɔɿiƚiɔɒl.

Яɘ-ɿɘviɘw ǫɿɒqʜiɔ (in ʇull) ɘɒɔʜ bɒy qoƨƚ nɘwƨ ɿɘlɘɒƨɘ.

⅃ɘɒɿn ƚo biƨƚinǫuiƨʜ dɘƚwɘɘn ɿɘlɘvɒnƚ/non-ɿɘlɘvɒnƚ nɘwƨ.

ᗡiƨinʇoɿmɒƚion iƨ ɿɘɒl.

ᗡiƨinʇoɿmɒƚion iƨ nɘɔɘƨƨɒɿy.

Ǝx: UƧ M⅃ ИᎮ (1) ᖷɒlƨɘ ƧA Tɿuɘ

Wʜy wɒƨ ƚʜiƨ nɘɔɘƨƨɒɿy␚

Wʜɒƚ puɘƨƚionƨ wɘɿɘ ɒƨʞɘb ɿɘ: ƧA qɿioɿ ƚo ƧA ɘvɘnƚƨ␚

Wʜy iƨ ƚʜiƨ ɿɘlɘvɒnƚ␚

Tʜinʞ miɿɿoɿ.

⅃ooʞ ƚʜɘɿɘ, oɿ [ʜɘɿɘ], oɿ ƚʜɘɿɘ, ƚɿuƚʜ iƨ dɘʜinb you.

Wʜɒƚ iƨ ɒ mɒq␚

Wʜy iƨ ɒ mɒq uƨɘʇul␚

Wʜɒƚ iƨ ɒ lɘǫɘnb␚

Wʜy iƨ ɒ lɘǫɘnb uƨɘʇul␚

Wʜɒƚ iƨ ɒ ƨɘpuɘnɔɘ␚

Wʜy iƨ ƚʜiƨ ɿɘlɘvɒnƚ␚

Wʜɘn boɘƨ ɒ mɒq dɘɔomɘ ɒ ǫuibɘ␚

Wʜɒƚ iƨ ɒ ʞɘyƨƚonɘ␚

Ǝvɘɿyƚʜinǫ ƨƚɒƚɘb iƨ ɿɘlɘvɒnƚ.

Ǝvɘɿyƚʜinǫ.

ᖷuƚuɿɘ qɿovibɘƨ qɒƨƚ.

Mɒq qɿovibɘƨ qiɔƚuɿɘ.

ꟼiɔƚuɿɘ qɿovibɘƨ 40,000ʇƚ. v.

40,000ʇƚ. v. iƨ ɔlɒƨƨiʇiɘb.

Wʜy iƨ ɒ mɒq uƨɘʇul␚

Tʜinʞ biɿɘɔƚion.

Tʜinʞ ʇull qiɔƚuɿɘ.

Wʜo ɔonƚɿolƨ ƚʜɘ nɒɿɿɒƚivɘ␚

Wʜy iƨ ƚʜiƨ ɿɘlɘvɒnƚ␚

Wʜɒƚ iƨ ɒ ƨqɘll␚

Wʜo iƨ ɒƨlɘɘq␚

ᗡiƨƨɘminɒƚion.

Aƚƚɘnƚion on bɘɔʞ.

Tʜɘɿɘ iƨ ɒn ɒɔƚivɘ wɒɿ on youɿ minb.

ᙠɘ [q]ɿɘqɒɿɘb.

Oqɘ[ɿ]ɒƚionƨ unbɘɿwɒy.

Oqɘɿɒƚoɿƨ [ɒ]ɔƚivɘ.

Ꭾɿɒqʜiɔ iƨ ɘƨƨɘnƚiɒl.

ᖷinb ƚʜɘ ʞɘ[y]ƨƚonɘ.

Movɘƨ ɒnb ɔounƚɘɿmovɘƨ.

Tʜɘy nɘvɘɿ ƚʜouǫʜƚ ƨʜɘ woulb loƨɘ.

Ƨnow wʜiƚɘ.

Ꭾobʇɒƚʜɘɿ III.

Iɿon Ǝɒǫlɘ.

Anonymous ID: 8f9b72 May 2, 2018, 5:58 a.m. No.1271189   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1271178

from wiki:

 

List of RTL scripts

Examples of right-to-left scripts (with ISO 15924 codes in brackets) are:

 

Current scripts

Hebrew alphabet (Hebr 125) – used for Hebrew, Yiddish and some other Jewish languages.

Arabic script (Arab 160, Aran 161) – used for Arabic, Persian, Urdu and many other languages.

Syriac alphabet (Syrc 135, variants 136–138 Syrn Syrj Syre) – used for varieties of the Syriac language.

Samaritan alphabet (Samr 123) – closely related to Hebrew, used for the Samaritans' writings.

Mandaic alphabet (Mand 140) – closely related to Syriac, used for the Mandaic language.

Thaana (Thaa 170) – used for Dhivehi.

Mende Kikakui (Mend 438) – for Mende in Sierrra Leone. Devised by Mohammed Turay and Kisimi Kamara in the late 19th century. Still used but only by about 500 people.

N'Ko script (Nkoo 165) – devised for the Manding languages of West Africa.

Adlam (Adlm 166) – devised in the 1980s for writing the Fula languages of West and Central Africa.

Hanifi Rohingya (Adlm 167) — developed in the 1980s for the Rohingya language.

Ancient scripts

Cypriot syllabary (Cprt 403) – predates Phoenician influence.

Phoenician alphabet (Phnx 115) – ancient, precursor to Hebrew, Imperial Aramaic, and Greek.

Imperial Aramaic alphabet (Armi 124) – ancient, closely related to Hebrew and Phoenician. Spread widely by the Neo-Assyrian and Achaemenid empires. The later Palmyrene form (Palm 126) was also used to write Aramaic.

Old South Arabian (Sarb)

Old North Arabian (Narb)

Pahlavi scripts (130–133: Prti Phli Phlp Phlv) – derived from Aramaic.

Avestan alphabet (Avst 134) – from Pahlavi, with added letters. Used for recording the Zoroastrian sacred texts during the Sassanid era.

Sogdian (no code), and Manichaean (Mani 139, associated with the Manichaean religion) – derived from Syriac. Sogdian eventually rotated from RTL to top-to-bottom, giving rise to the Old Uyghur, Mongolian, and Manchu vertical scripts.

Nabatean alphabet (Nbat) – intermediate between Syriac and Arabic.

Kharosthi (Khar 305) – an ancient script of India, derived from Aramaic.

Old Turkic runes (also called Orkhon runes Orkh 175)

Old Hungarian runes (Hung 176).

Old Italic alphabets (Ital 210) – Early Etruscan was RTL but LTR examples later became more common. Umbrian, Oscan, and Faliscan were written right-to-left. Unicode treats Old Italic as left-to-right, to match modern usage.[1]

Lydian alphabet (Lydi 116) – ancient; some texts are left-to-right or boustrophedon.