ISO-8859-1 (Latin1)
Latin1 covers most West European languages, such as French (fr), Spanish (es), Catalan (ca), Basque (eu),
Portuguese (pt), Italian (it), Albanian (sq), Rhaeto-Romanic (rm), Dutch (nl), German (de), Danish (da), Swedish (sv), 
Norwegian (no), Finnish (fi), Faroese (fo), Icelandic (is), Irish (ga), Scottish (gd), and English (en).

ISO-8859-2 (Latin2)
Latin2 covers the languages of Central and Eastern Europe: Czech (cs), Hungarian (hu), Polish (pl), Romanian (ro),
Croatian (hr), Slovak (sk), Slovenian (sl), Sorbian.

ISO-8859-3 (Latin3)
Latin3 is popular with authors of Esperanto (eo) and Maltese (mt), 
and it covered Turkish before the introduction of Latin5 in 1988.

ISO-8859-4 (Latin4)
Latin4 introduced letters for Estonian (et), the Baltic languages Latvian (lv, Lettish) and Lithuanian (lt),
Greenlandic (kl) and Lappish.

ISO-8859-5 (Cyrillic)
With Cyrillic letters you can type Bulgarian (bg), Byelorussian (be), Macedonian (mk), Russian (ru), 
Serbian (sr) and pre-1990 (no ghe with upturn) Ukrainian (uk).

ISO-8859-6 (Arabic)
This fixed font is not well-suited for text display. Each Arabic letter occurs in up to four (2)
presentation forms: initial, medial, final or separate.

ISO-8859-7 (Greek)
This is (modern monotonic) Greek (el) to me. ISO-8859-7 was formerly known as ELOT-928 or ECMA-118:1986.

ISO-8859-8 (Hebrew)
Hebrew (iw) and Yiddish (ji).

ISO-8859-9 (Latin5)
Latin5 replaces the rarely needed Icelandic letters  in Latin1 with the Turkish ones.

ISO-8859-10 (Latin6)
Latin6 rearranged the Latin4 characters, dropped some symbols and the Latvian &rcedil;, added the last missing
Inuit (Greenlandic Eskimo) and non-Skolt Sami (Lappish) letters and reintroduced the Icelandic  to cover
the entire Nordic area.

