You're free to use it with your Adobe Fonts account just as you would any other font in the Adobe Fonts library. Noto Sans is available via an open source license. The fonts are free to use, making beautiful type accessible to anyone for any project. Google Fonts collaborates with type designers, foundries and the design community worldwide to create a directory of open source fonts. If you are not familiar with the characters, you can check the characters displayed here with the graphical display at.
To see exactly which characters are included in a particular font, you can use a utility such as Andrew West’s BabelMap, or WunderMoosen’s FontChecker.
You can find some or all of the characters in this range in the Windows Unicode fonts Alice0 MX, Alice1 MX, Alice2 MX, Alice 3 MX, Alice4 MX, Alice5 MX, Arial Unicode MS, Code2000, DejaVu Sans, DejaVu Sans Condensed, DejaVu Sans Mono, DokChampa, JG Basic Lao, JG Chantabouli Lao, JG Lao Old Arial, JG Lao Oldface, JG LaoTimes, Lao Unicode, Phetsarath OT, Saysettha MX, Saysettha OT, Saysettha Unicode, Sun-ExtA, VangVieng MX and XiengThong MX, and in the Unix Unicode font ClearlyU. The characters that appear in the “Character” columns of the following table depend on the browser that you are using, the fonts installed on your computer, and the browser options you have chosen that determine the fonts used to display particular character sets, encodings or languages. Lao Script for Windows allows Unicode Lao to be typed in Word for Windand XP with Windows 95, 98 and Me, and in any Unicode-aware application with Windows NT 4, 2000 and XP. Mozilla and Netscape 7 can also display Unicode Lao text, but they do not allow a preferred font to be selected.
Internet Explorer 5, 5.5 and 6 for Windows and Opera 6 for Windows can display Unicode Lao text.
Microsoft Windows incorporates support for Lao Unicode from Windows Vista onwards. You can find out more about Lao Unicode at the Lao Language and Unicode page. You can find some Unicode Lao text to try at Saysettha OT Sample. There are not normally spaces between words, only between sentences.
The Lao script is caseless and written left to right, and is used mainly for Lao, the predominant language used in Laos.