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Lauttis

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Lauttis is a shopping centre in Lauttasaari , Helsinki , Finland . It was opened on 1 December 2016.

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29-456: Lauttis is a so-called hybrid building, where the same building houses a parking lot, a shopping centre and apartments. Lauttis has about 6000 m of business space and about 10000 m of apartments. The shopping centre has a total of 25 businesses and has a direct connection to the Lauttasaari metro station . Lauttis includes the food stores K-Supermarket and S-Market , as well as Alko ,

58-555: A pharmacy , the rewarded restaurant Pizzeria Luca, Hanko Sushi , Salaattibaari, Wayne's cafe, Espresso House, a Jungle Juice bar and the Fazer bakery Gateau. The shopping centre also includes the nature product shop Life, the INFO book store, a post office, a Nordea bank office, Erkkeri real estate management, a Kukkakaari flower shop, R-kioski , Filmtown, and the optician shops Instrumentarium and Silmäasema. The list of businesses can be seen on

87-599: A baseline letter with a superscript release, such as [tˢʼ] or [kˣʼ] , where the scope of the apostrophe includes the non-superscript letter, but the combining apostrophe U+315 might be used to indicate a weakly articulated ejective consonant like [ᵗ̕] or [ᵏ̕] , where the whole consonant is written as a superscript, or together with U+2BC when separate apostrophes have scope over the base and modifier letters, as in ⟨ pʼᵏˣ̕ ⟩. Spacing diacritics, as in ⟨ tʲ ⟩, cannot be secondarily superscripted in plain text: ⟨ ᵗʲ ⟩. (In this instance,

116-610: A future version of the Unicode Standard. The two length marks are also supported: These are used to add length to another superscript, such as long aspiration. Superscript wildcards (full caps) are largely supported: e.g. ᴺC (prenasalized consonant), ꟲN (prestopped nasal), Pꟳ (fricative release), NᴾF (epenthetic plosive), CVNᵀ (tone-bearing syllable), Cᴸ (liquid or lateral release), Cᴿ (rhotic or resonant release), Vᴳ (off-glide/diphthong), Cⱽ (fleeting vowel). Superscript S for sibilant release has been proposed for

145-456: A future version of the Unicode Standard. Superscripts of the Bantuist labio-dental plosives ⟨ ȹ ⟩ and ⟨ ȸ ⟩ have been proposed for a future version of the Unicode Standard. The central semivowels ⟨ ɉ ⟩, ɥ̶ , and w̶ have also been proposed for a future version of the Unicode Standard. Old-style click letters have been proposed for a future version of

174-575: A future version of the Unicode Standard; superscript Ʞ for fleeting/epenthetic click has not. Other basic Latin superscript wildcards for tone and weak indeterminate sounds, as described in the article on the International Phonetic Alphabet , are mostly supported. (See table in previous section.) In addition, a very few IPA letters beyond the basic Latin alphabet have combining forms or are supported as subscripts: Primarily for compatibility with earlier character sets, Unicode contains

203-410: A long history dating back to the 1920s. The name "Lauttis" was chosen as the winner of a naming competition held by YIT. Most of the entries were variations of the name Lauttasaari. There were almost 800 entries. There were four finalists, of which Lauttis received the most votes. 35% of voters supported Lauttis. The naming competition started in the farewell event for the old shopping centre in 2013. At

232-488: A normal x to show the subscripting/superscripting. The table on the left contains the actual Unicode characters; the one on the right contains the equivalents using HTML markup for the subscript or superscript. Unicode version 16.0 also includes subscript and superscript characters that are intended for semantic usage, in the following blocks: Consolidated, the Unicode standard contains superscript and subscript versions of

261-509: A subset of Latin, Greek and Cyrillic letters. Here they are arranged in alphabetical order for comparison (or for copy and paste convenience). Since these characters appear in different Unicode ranges, they may not appear to be the same size or position due to font substitution in the browser. Shaded cells mark small capitals that are not very distinct from minuscules, and Greek letters that are indistinguishable from Latin, and so would not be expected to be supported by Unicode. Little punctuation

290-481: Is 10 (one thousand ) times the length of 1 metre, but 1 square kilometre is (10 ) (10 , one million ) times the area of 1 square metre, and 1 cubic kilometre is (10 ) (10 , one billion ) cubic metres. The square metre may be used with all SI prefixes used with the metre. Unicode has several characters used to represent metric area units, but these are for compatibility with East Asian character encodings and are not meant to be used in new documents. Instead,

319-437: Is also supported, at U+1D4C ⟨ ᵌ ⟩. However, the briefly resurrected vowel letter ⟨ ʚ ⟩ (U+029A) is not supported, only its reversed replacement ⟨ ɞ ⟩ is. Among older letters, ⟨ ᴜ ⟩ (U+1D1C), a graphic variant of ⟨ ʊ ⟩, is supported at ⟨ ᶸ ⟩ (U+1DB8). Among para-IPA letters, Sinological superscript ⟨ ɿ ʅ ʮ ʯ ⟩ have been proposed for

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348-477: Is dedicated to superscript IPA. Characters for sounds with secondary articulation are set off in parentheses and placed below the base letters. The spacing diacritic for ejective consonants, U+2BC, works with superscript letters despite not being superscript itself: ⟨ ᵖʼ ᵗʼ ᶜʼ ᵏˣʼ ⟩. If a distinction needs to be made, the combining apostrophe U+315 may be used: ⟨ ᵖ̕ ᵗ̕ ᶜ̕ ᵏˣ̕ ⟩. The spacing diacritic should be used for

377-456: Is encoded. Parentheses are shown above in the basic block above, and the exclamation mark ⟨ ꜝ ⟩ is shown in the IPA table below. A question mark may be created with a superscript gelded question mark and a combining dot: ⟨ ˀ̣ ⟩, although some fonts do not render it properly. Additional superscript capitals are ᴭ ᴯ ᴲ ᴻ. Some of these are small caps in the source documents in

406-579: The International Bureau of Weights and Measures ) or square meter ( American spelling ) is the unit of area in the International System of Units (SI) with symbol m . It is the area of a square with sides one metre in length. Adding and subtracting SI prefixes creates multiples and submultiples; however, as the unit is exponentiated , the quantities grow exponentially by the corresponding power of 10 . For example, 1 kilometre

435-605: The Unicode Consortium have made recommendations on the choice between using markup and using superscript and subscript characters: When used in mathematical context ( MathML ) it is recommended to consistently use style markup for superscripts and subscripts […] However, when super and sub-scripts are to reflect semantic distinctions, it is easier to work with these meanings encoded in text rather than markup, for example, in phonetic or phonemic transcription . The intended use when these characters were added to Unicode

464-555: The Unicode superscript U+00B2 ² SUPERSCRIPT TWO can be used, as in m². One square metre is equal to: Unicode subscripts and superscripts Unicode has subscripted and superscripted versions of a number of characters including a full set of Arabic numerals . These characters allow any polynomial , chemical and certain other equations to be represented in plain text without using any form of markup like HTML or TeX . The World Wide Web Consortium and

493-419: The cap line and the baseline , respectively. When used with the solidus , these glyphs are a common substitute for diagonal fractions, such as ³/₄ for the ¾ glyph. This change was made because using markup does not give a good graphic approximation of fractions (compare markup / 4 with super/sub-script ³/₄). The change also makes the superscript letters useful for ordinal indicators , more closely matching

522-558: The Lauttasaari days in the next autumn the finalists were revealed, allowing the people to vote for their own favourite. The name Lauttis is short and compact, and clearly tells people where they are. The old familiar nickname "Laru" for Lauttasaari still remains in use as a nickname for the island as a whole. 60°09′37″N 24°52′54″E  /  60.1602°N 24.8816°E  / 60.1602; 24.8816 Square metre The square metre ( international spelling as used by

551-707: The Unicode Standard. The Unicode characters for superscript (modifier) IPA vowel letters, plus a pair of extended letters ⟨ ᵻ ᵿ ⟩ found in English dictionaries, are as follows. Recently retired alternative letters such as ⟨ ɩ ɷ ⟩ are also supported; they are set off in parentheses and placed below the standard IPA letters: The precomposed Unicode rhotic vowel letters ⟨ ɚ ɝ ⟩ are not directly supported. The rhotic diacritic U+02DE ◌˞ should be used instead: ⟨ ᵊ˞ ᶟ˞ ⟩. ⟨ ɜ ⟩ and ⟨ ᶟ ⟩ are reversed ɛ . The older IPA turned ɛ , ⟨ ᴈ ⟩,

580-598: The Unicode proposals. Superscript capital s has been proposed for a future version of the Unicode Standard. Superscript versons of small capital A and E have been proposed for a future version of the Unicode Standard. Superscript versons of Greek psi and omega have been proposed for a future version of the Unicode Standard. Many of the Cyrillic characters were added to the Cyrillic Extended-D block, which

609-511: The fonts installed, or if your browser does not support this behavior.) The most common superscript digits (1, 2, and 3) were in ISO-8859-1 and were therefore carried over into those positions in the Latin-1 range of Unicode. The rest were placed in a dedicated section of Unicode at U+ 2070 to U+209F. The two tables below show these characters. Each superscript or subscript character is preceded by

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638-407: The layout system that a fraction such as ¾ is to be rendered using automatic glyph substitution. User-end support was quite poor for a number of years, but fonts, browsers, word processors, desktop publishing software and others increasingly support the intended Unicode behavior. A selection of supporting fonts is displayed in the table below. (These will not display properly if you do not have

667-400: The old IPA letter for [tʲ] , ⟨ ƫ ⟩, has a superscript variant in Unicode, U+1DB5 ⟨ ᶵ ⟩, but that is not generally the case.) Among older letters, ⟨ ꜧ ⟩ (U+A727) was a graphic variant of ⟨ ɮ ⟩. Its superscript is supported at ⟨ ꭜ ⟩ (U+AB5C). The most common letters with palatal hook are also supported; they are displayed in

696-547: The parking lot was YIT . The Lauttis area was developed in accordance to YIT's "Kaupunki kylässä" concept. Lauttis was built in place of the old Lauttasaari shopping centre, which was demolished in 2014. K-Supermarket, S-Market, Alko, Instrumentarium and R-kioski were also present in the old shopping centre. The Lauttis shopping centre has been awarded a gold-level LEED gold environmental certificate because of its solution of building heating and modern solutions for control of heating, cooling and lighting. The name "Lauttis" has

725-410: The shopping centre's web page. The post services of Lauttasaari were moved to the INFO book store in the shopping centre, which replaced Posti 's own shop located on Gyldénintie. 140 apartments were built on top of the shopping centre, which were completed in late 2016 and early 2017. A 230-space underground parking lot was also built in connection to the shopping centre. The designer and developer of

754-468: The table above. IPA once had an idiosyncratic curl on some of the palatalized letters: these are the fricative letters ⟨ ʆ ʓ ⟩. Their superscript forms have been proposed for a future version of the Unicode Standard. The retired letters ⟨ ƞ ⟩ and ⟨ ɼ ⟩ have also been proposed for a future version of the Unicode Standard. Among para-IPA letters, Sinological superscript ⟨ ȡ ȴ ȵ ȶ ⟩ have been proposed for

783-406: The ª and º characters. However, it makes them incorrect for normal superscript and subscript, and so chemical and algebraic formulas are better rendered by using markup. Unicode intended that diagonal fractions be rendered by a different mechanism: the fraction slash U+2044 is visually similar to the solidus, but when used with the ordinary digits (not the superscripts and subscripts), it instructs

812-660: Was added to the free Gentium Plus and Andika fonts with version 6.2 in February 2023. See also small caps in Unicode . The Latin Extended-F block was created for the remaining superscript IPA letters . They are supported by the free Gentium Plus and Andika fonts. Additional superscript characters for historical and para-IPA letters have been proposed for future versions of the Unicode Standard. The Unicode characters for superscript (modifier) IPA and extIPA consonant letters are as follows. The entire Latin Extended-F block

841-427: Was to produce true superscripts and subscripts so that chemical and algebraic formulas could be written without markup. Thus "H₂O" (using a subscript 2 character) is supposed to be identical to "H 2 O" (with subscript markup). In reality, many fonts that include these characters ignore the Unicode definition, and instead design the digits for mathematical numerator and denominator glyphs, which are aligned with

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