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Latin Capital Letter B with dot above U+1E03 ḃ Latin Small Letter B with dot above U+1E04 Ḅ Latin Capital Letter B with dot below U+1E05 ḅ Latin Small Letter B with dot below U+1E06 Ḇ Latin Capital Letter B with line below U+1E07 ḇ Latin Small Letter B with line below U+1E08 Ḉ Latin Capital Letter C with cedilla and acute U+1E09 ḉ
Latin Capital Letter T with dot above 0659 ISO 8859-14: U+1E6B ṫ Latin Small Letter T with dot above 0660 U+1E6C Ṭ Latin Capital Letter T with dot below: U+1E6D ṭ Latin Small Letter T with dot below U+1E6E Ṯ Latin Capital Letter T with line below U+1E6F ṯ Latin Small Letter T with line below U+1E70 Ṱ
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 13:05, 16 November 2017: 393 × 362 (4 KB): 1234qwer1234qwer4: Reverted to version as of 20:52, 26 November 2016 (UTC) better
Former letter of the English, German, Sorbian, and Latvian alphabets Ꟊ ꟊ S with short stroke overlay Used for tau gallicum in Gaulish [10] S with diagonal stroke Used for Cupeño and Luiseño [30] Ꞅ ꞅ Insular S Variant of s [9] [3] Ƨ: Reversed S (Tone two) A letter used in the Zhuang language from 1957 to 1986 to indicate its ...
T, or t, is the twentieth letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. Its name in English is tee (pronounced / ˈ t iː / ), plural tees .
Old English did not always make a distinction between uppercase and lowercase, and at best had embossed or decorated letters indicating sections. Middle English capitalization in manuscripts remained haphazard, and was often done for visual aesthetics more than grammar; in poetry, the first letter of each line of verse is often capitalized.
Wikipedia avoids unnecessary capitalization.In English, capitalization is primarily needed for proper names, acronyms, and for the first letter of a sentence. [a] Wikipedia relies on sources to determine what is conventionally capitalized; only words and phrases that are consistently capitalized in a substantial majority of independent, reliable sources are capitalized in Wikipedia.
The grapheme Ť (minuscule: ť) is a letter in the Czech and Slovak alphabets used to denote /c/, the voiceless palatal plosive (precisely alveolo-palatal), the sound similar to British English t in stew. [1] [2] It is formed from Latin T with the addition of háček; minuscule (ť) has háček modified to apostrophe-like stroke instead of ...