Select the appropriate conversion type (e.g., "Legacy to Unicode").
To fake the Times New Roman look on platforms that don’t support rich text, you need to replace standard Latin letters with or serif-style Unicode characters that look like Times New Roman but are technically different characters.
| Unicode Block | Style | Best Match For | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Mathematical Bold Serif (U+1D400–U+1D433) | Bold, upright, serif | | | Mathematical Italic Serif (U+1D434–U+1D467) | Italic, serif | Times New Roman Italic | | Mathematical Bold Italic Serif (U+1D468–U+1D49B) | Bold italic, serif | Times New Roman Bold Italic | | Mathematical Double-Struck (U+1D538–) | Blackboard bold | Not a match for Times New Roman | | Mathematical Sans-Serif | No serifs | Not a match | times new roman font to unicode converter
Click the "Copy" button next to the generated Unicode text string.
Here is a quick comparison:
Using these tools is straightforward, but to get the best results, follow this guide.
If you have such styled text and want to use it in a standard font like Times New Roman, you can use a specialized "Unicode to Plain Text" converter. These tools identify and map stylized Unicode characters (like 𝗔 or 𝔄 ) back to their standard Latin equivalents ( A ). Once converted, you can paste the clean text into your document and apply the Times New Roman font as usual. Such a process aligns with the broader definition of universal text processing formats. Select the appropriate conversion type (e
Using Font Squirrel, a popular online font conversion tool, follow these steps:
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