Unicode

Etymology
Published as a draft proposal in 1988, “intended to suggest a unique, unified, universal encoding”. From.

Proper noun

 * 1)  A series of character encoding standards intended to support the characters used by a large number of the world’s languages.
 * 2)  The Unicode standards, together with standards for representing character strings as byte strings.
 * 1)  The Unicode standards, together with standards for representing character strings as byte strings.

Translations

 * Albanian: Unicode
 * Amharic: ዩኒኮድ
 * Arabic: يُونِيكُود
 * Armenian: Յունիկոդ
 * Belarusian: Юніко́д
 * Bengali:
 * Blin: ዩኒኮድ
 * Bulgarian: Унико́д
 * Catalan: Unicode
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 統一碼, 萬國碼, 單一碼
 * Mandarin:, ,
 * Czech: Unicode
 * Danish: Unicode
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: Unikodo
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * Georgian: უნიკოდი
 * German:
 * Greek:
 * Hebrew:
 * Hindi: यूनिकोड
 * Hungarian:
 * Igbo: Yunikod
 * Indonesian: Unicode
 * Interlingua: Unicode
 * Italian:
 * Japanese: ユニコード
 * Kannada: ಯುನಿಕೋಡ್
 * Khün: ᨿᩪᨶᩥᨤ᩠ᨯᩰᨯ᩼
 * Korean:
 * Latvian: Unikods
 * Lithuanian: Unikodas
 * Maori: waehereao
 * Marathi: युनिकोड
 * Mongolian: Юникод
 * Norwegian: Unicode
 * Persian: یونیکد, یونی‌کد
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:
 * Russian:, Унико́д
 * Sebat Bet Gurage: ዩኒኮድ
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: Уникод
 * Roman: Unikod
 * Sindhi: يونيڪوڊ
 * Sorbian:
 * Upper Sorbian: Unicode
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: Unicode
 * Tagalog: Yunikowd
 * Tamil: யூனிக்கோடு
 * Telugu:, యూనీకోడ్
 * Thai: ยูนิโคด
 * Tigrinya: ዩኒኮድ
 * Turkish: Evrensel Kod, Unicode
 * Ukrainian: Юніко́д
 * Uyghur: يۇنىكود
 * Vietnamese:
 * Welsh:
 * Xamtanga: ዩኒኮድ

Noun

 * 1)  Characters from a contextually different script, often used in a nonstandard fashion.

Proper noun

 * 1)   series of computer encoding standards