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Differences

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Atenea Egyptian

Atenea Egyptian

Touches
The upper-case 'Q' tail touches the circle.
Closed
The '&' (ampersand) is traditional style with two enclosed loops.
Below
The upper-case 'J' descends below the baseline.
Closed
The '4' is closed.
Double
The diagonal strokes of the upper-case 'K' meet in a 'T'.
Baseline
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'M' is on the baseline.
Tapered
The upper-case 'A' has tapered verticals.
V-shaped
The sides of the lower-case 'y' are angled (V-shaped).
Square/rectangle
The dot on the lower-case 'i' or 'j' is square or rectangular.
S22
The feet of the lower-case 'h' have two serifs on each foot.

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Note that the fonts in the icons shown above represent general examples, not necessarily the two fonts chosen for comparison.

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Egon

Egon

Crosses
The upper-case 'Q' tail crosses the circle.
Et shaped
The '&' (ampersand) looks like 'Et' with one enclosed loop (with or without exit stroke).
On
The upper-case 'J' sits on the baseline.
Open
The '4' is open.
Single
The diagonal strokes of the upper-case 'K' meet at the vertical (with or without a gap).
Above
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'M' is above the baseline.
Parallel
The upper-case 'A' has parallel verticals.
U-shaped
The sides of the lower-case 'y' are parallel (U-shaped).
Diamond
The dot on the lower-case 'i' or 'j' is diamond-shaped.
SLR
The feet of the lower-case 'h' have one serif on each foot, facing outwards.