Thorn and eth, IIRC, but not yogh. (In fact, when I was attempting to typeset a song, I either couldn't yogh in Unicode at all or I couldn't find it in the fonts I have; I forget which. I wound up using '3' in place of it.
Note BTW that these tokens are case sensitive: you can write an uppercase &Thorn;orn with &Thorn; -- similarly for the Greek letters.
Huh. In the comment where I say it works, it fails. Odd and upsetting. :-(
þ Þ ð Ð σ Σ
Hmm.
Got it: For the OE/ME/Danish characters you capitalize the entire token: Þ -- but for the Greek you only capitalize the first letter: Σ (an onfortunate inconsistency. *pout*)
using google(html &epsilon &alpha þ), I found this printer friendly link: http://www.creationguide.com/characters/index.html It seems to me to support most west european writing and math (including set notation). I noticed that there is a sequence for the euro "&euro" € so they must be updating this list of special characters from time to time :) Thanx for showing off your html skills and explaining them afterwards ^_^
Re: how do you do that?
Note BTW that these tokens are case sensitive: you can write an uppercase &Thorn;orn with &Thorn; -- similarly for the Greek letters.
Re: how do you do that?
þ Þ ð Ð σ Σ
Hmm.
Got it: For the OE/ME/Danish characters you capitalize the entire token:
Þ -- but for the Greek you only capitalize the first letter: Σ (an onfortunate inconsistency. *pout*)
Re: how do you do that?