Modern versions of Times New Roman have a glyph for “ẞ”, old versions don’t (U+1E9E was added in Unicode version 5.1, in April 2008). The design of the roman is based on types by Claude Garamond ( c. It was released jointly by the Linotype, Monotype, and Stempel type foundries in 1967.
Strauß, when names are written in all-uppercase. Sabon is an old-style serif typeface designed by the German-born typographer and designer Jan Tschichold (19021974) in the period 19641967. In normal German orthography, “ß” maps to “SS” (two copies of normal letter “S”) in uppercasing, but nowadays Unicode also has U+1E9E, to meet the need to preserve differences in spelling, as in Strauss vs. However, if the text is interpreted as really being in uppercase, with letters other than the first one represented using small caps, and if “SS” is then interpreted as or replaced by the uppercase form of “ß”, then it’s “ẞ” U+1E9E LATIN CAPITAL LETTER SHARP S.
Anyway, the “character” in your second comment is U+E03F, a Private Use code point apparently used for small caps “ß”, CFF glyph id germandbls.sc, in Sabon. Presumably, some conversion between “ss” and “ß” is taking place somewhere. This still does not explain what is happening, since the string contains “Broussonet” in that sense, with “ss” represented by two copies of the Private Use code point that is used for small caps “s” in Sabon. This is somewhat weird, since normally small capitals are nowadays included as glyph variants selectable using OpenType features rather than Private Use code points, which are non-portable by definition. The copied string contains Private Use code points that Sabon seems to use for small capitals. For the word you mention in a comment, this would make little sense, because Broussonet was a French naturalist, and French does not use “ß” (and German does not use “ß” for foreign names), so the few occurrences of “Broußonet” that Google finds must be odd misspellings. We wish you the best of luck.This is a bit of a mystery, but I think that the glyph that you are seeing is a small capital glyph for “ß” U+00DF LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S, often called “German double s”. And do let us know your feedback about it in the comment section below. Share this tremendously legible font with your friends and colleagues at your social networks. But before downloading it we suggest you check the image attached to see how your text will look like.
I hope this typeface will work well for you throughout your career by all its weights.
We here are providing this font for free and you can get it by a simple single click on the download link. Developing a game or a website template, printing in the fabric industry and in every relating drafting tasks. You can create an astonishing neat emblem, compose a book, or a book cover, brochure texts, banners designs. Along with its smooth texture, keen features, vast languages supports and very elegant attractive arrangement, Sabon is perfect for many designing approaches. A well-using typeface in the early nineties. This classic font family is also known as Jacques Sabon typeface. Styles including for Sabon are roman, italic, bold, and bold italic. Jan Tschichold was the one who produces this typeface firstly and releases at Linotype, Monotype, and Stempel type foundries during 1967. This font family consists of four unique styles and each of them comprises their own advanced looks. This old-style sans serif font took the obligation of delivering the top-notch glimpses to the web or printing page using it. There is some awesome typeface existing in the world that features the best appearance all the times.