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Oe with macron (Ө̄ ө̄; italics: Ө̄ ө̄) is a letter of the Cyrillic script. Oe with macron is used in Selkup to represent a long close-mid front rounded vowel /øː/ and in Uilta to represent long / o ~ ɵ ː /. Until a new alphabet was published in 2016, it was used in Negidal to represent a long close-mid central rounded vowel /ɵː/.
Open O with tilde and grave: Ɔ̃̂ ɔ̃̂: Open O with tilde and circumflex: Ɔ̃̌ ɔ̃̌: Open O with tilde and caron: Ɔ̃̍ ɔ̃̍: Open O with tilde and vertical line: Ɔ̄ ɔ̄: Open O with macron: Ɔ̆ ɔ̆: Open O with breve: Ɔ̈ ɔ̈: Open O with diaeresis: Ɔ̌ ɔ̌: Open O with caron: Ɔ̍ ɔ̍: Open O with vertical line: Ɔ̣ ɔ̣ ...
Ā, lowercase ā ("A with macron"), is a grapheme, a Latin A with a macron, used in several orthographies.Ā is used to denote a long A.Examples are the Baltic languages (e.g. Latvian), Polynesian languages, including Māori and Moriori, some romanizations of Japanese, Persian, Pashto, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic (which represents a long A sound) and Arabic, and some Latin texts (especially for ...
O with macron (О̄ о̄; italics: О̄ о̄) is a letter of the Cyrillic script.In all its forms it looks exactly like the Latin letter O with macron (Ō ō Ō ō).. O with macron are used in the Evenki, Mansi, Nanai, Negidal, Orok, Ulch, Kildin Sami, Selkup, and Chechen languages.
Among English-speaking typographers the symbol may be called a "slashed O" [1] or "o with stroke". Although these names suggest it is a ligature or a diacritical variant of the letter o , it is considered a separate letter in Danish and Norwegian, and it is alphabetized after z — thus x , y , z , æ , ø , and å .
The IPA symbol is a turned letter c and both the symbol and the sound are commonly called "open-o". The name open-o represents the sound, in that it is like the sound represented by o , the close-mid back rounded vowel, except it is more open. It also represents the symbol, which can be remembered as an o which has been "opened" by removing ...
67 million to one. That’s the odds of making two holes-in-one in a single round, according to the National Hole-In-One Registry. On Friday, Frank Bensel Jr. made two in a row.
The song opens with the line: I've been working on a cocktail, called grounds for divorce. Uncut magazine said it was "surely one of the best opening lines of any pop song in years" [1] and NME compared it to something James Bond might say "this is kind of glorious one-liner he’d mutter before taking the bad guys down and then smooching a lofty Eastern European countess."