--- /dev/null
+<p>
+ Noto Naskh Arabic is a modulated (“serif”) Naskh design, suitable for texts in
+ the Middle Eastern <em>Arabic</em> script and for use together with serif
+ fonts.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Noto Naskh Arabic has multiple weights, contains 1,598 glyphs, 12 OpenType
+ features, and supports 1,122 characters from 6 Unicode blocks: Arabic
+ Presentation Forms-A, Arabic, Arabic Presentation Forms-B, Arabic Supplement,
+ Arabic Extended-A, Basic Latin.
+</p>
+<h3>Supported writing systems</h3>
+<h4>Arabic</h4>
+<p>
+ Arabic (<span class="autonym">العربية</span>) is a Middle Eastern abjad,
+ written right-to-left (660 million users). 2nd- or 3rd-most used script in the
+ world. Used for the Arabic language since the 4th century, and for many other
+ languages, often in Islamic countries or communities in Asia, Africa and the
+ Middle East, like Persian, Uyghur, Kurdish, Punjabi, Sindhi, Balti, Balochi,
+ Pashto, Lurish, Urdu, Kashmiri, Rohingya, Somali, Mandinka, Kazakh (in China),
+ Kurdish, or Azeri (in Iran). Was used for Turkish until 1928. Includes 28
+ basic consonant letters for the Arabic language, plus additional letters for
+ other languages. Some letters represent a consonant or a long vowel, while
+ short vowels are optionally written with diacritics. Variants include Kufi
+ with a very simplified structure, the widely-used Naskh calligraphic variant,
+ and the highly cursive Nastaliq used mainly for Urdu. Needs software support
+ for complex text layout (shaping). Read more on
+ <a href="https://scriptsource.org/scr/Arab">ScriptSource</a>,
+ <a href="https://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode13.0.0/ch09.pdf#G20596"
+ >Unicode</a
+ >, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_15924:Arab">Wikipedia</a>,
+ <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Category:Arabic_script">Wiktionary</a
+ >, <a href="https://r12a.github.io/scripts/links?iso=Arab">r12a</a>.
+</p>