Thread:Support/Chữ Nôm support/reply

This is what I found in Wikipedia:


 * Literary Chinese chữ nho characters (scholar's characters, 𡨸儒): were used by the educated elite and in official documents until Vietnam gained independence from China in 939 CE.
 * Vernacular chữ nôm characters 𡨸喃) look like Chinese characters to the untrained eye. In fact, many characters were borrowed and many more modified and invented to represent native Vietnamese words. For the next 1000 years—from the 10th century and into the 20th—much of Vietnamese literature, philosophy, history, law, medicine, religion, and government policy was written in Nôm script.

Both scripts have fallen out of common usage in modern Vietnam, and only a few scholars and some extremely elderly people are able to read chữ nôm today. In China, members of the Jing Minority still write in Chữ Nôm.

Are you sure it makes sense to add this localisation? Can you please provide a motivation.