<Tr> <Td> র‌্যাম </Td> <Td> </Td> <Td> র&zwnj; ্যাম </Td> <Td> র্যাম </Td> <Td> </Td> <Td> র্যাম </Td> <Td> র‍্যাম means RAM . There is a vowel in Bengali (অ্যা) which is used to write foreign words such as RAM, Bat, Fan etc . It hasn't its own character . </Td> </Tr> <P> The picture shows how the code looks when it is rendered correctly, and in every row the correct and incorrect pictures should be different . If the correct display and the incorrect one look the same to you, or if either of them is significantly different from the corresponding picture, your system is not displaying the Unicode correctly . </P> <P> In German typography, ligatures may not cross the constituent boundaries within compounds . Thus, in the first German example, the prefix Auf - is separated from the rest of the word to prohibit the ligature fl . Similarly in English, ligatures should not cross morpheme boundaries . For example, in some words' fly' and' fish' are morphemes but in others they're not; therefore words like' deaf‌ly' and' self‌ish' should not have ligatures (respectively of fl and fi) while' dayfly' and' catfish' should have them . </P> <P> Persian uses this character extensively for certain prefixes, suffixes and compound words . It is necessary for disambiguating compounds from non-compound words, which use a full space . </P>

Zwj (zero with joiner) and zwnj (zero with non joiner)