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  2. Swedish alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_alphabet

    The Swedish traditional handwritten alphabet is the same as the ordinary Latin cursive alphabet, but the letters ö and ä are written by connecting the dots with a curved line, identical to a tilde ̃ , hence looking like õ and ã .

  3. Å - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Å

    The letter Å (å in lower case) represents various (although often similar) sounds in several languages. It is a separate letter in Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, North Frisian, Low Saxon, Transylvanian Saxon, Walloon, Chamorro, Lule Sami, Pite Sami, Skolt Sami, Southern Sami, Ume Sami, Pamirian languages, and Greenlandic alphabets.

  4. Æ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Æ

    German and Swedish. The equivalent letter in German and Swedish is ä, but it is not located at the same place within the alphabet. In German, it is not a separate letter from "A" but in Swedish, it is the second-to-last letter (between å and ö). In the normalized spelling of Middle High German, æ represents a long vowel [ɛː]. The actual ...

  5. List of Latin-script letters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin-script_letters

    Pre-1921 Latvian letter ᴋ̇: Small capital K with dot above: Ŀ ŀ: L with middle dot: Catalan 𝼦 L with mid-height left hook: Used by the British and Foreign Bible Society in the early 20th century for romanization of the Malayalam language. [44] L̀ l̀: L with grave: Ntcham Ĺ ĺ: L with acute: Slovak, Ntcham L̂ l̂: L with circumflex ...

  6. Ä - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ä

    The letter Ä arose in German and later in Swedish from originally writing the E in AE on top of the A, which with time became simplified as two dots, consistent with the Sütterlin script. In the Icelandic , Faroese , Danish and Norwegian alphabets, " Æ " is still used instead of Ä.

  7. Medieval runes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_runes

    The practice of using the ʀ rune to stand for /y/ then spread to the rest of Scandinavia. [6] Meanwhile, when the nasal /ɑ̃/ changed into /o/, this became the new phoneme for the ą rune. [5] Towards the end of the 11th century and in the early 12th century, new d and p runes were created through the addition of stings to the t and b runes. [5]

  8. Regional handwriting variation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regional_handwriting_variation

    The lowercase letter p: The French way of writing this character has a half-way ascender as the vertical extension of the descender, which also does not complete the bowl at the bottom. In early Finnish writing, the curve to the bottom was omitted, thus the resulting letter resembled an n with a descender (like ꞃ).

  9. Swedish orthography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_orthography

    Swedish spelling was long unregulated, but beginning in the later part of the 1700s, efforts increased to regulate spelling. In 1801, the Swedish Academy commissioned Afhandling om Svenska stafsättet , a treatise on Swedish spelling by poet Carl Gustaf af Leopold. The goal of the treatise was to create a more homogeneous spelling system, based ...