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The symbol you want can be accessed one of two ways: 1) From the Insert menu, select Symbol. You'll see a dialog box. From the drop-down menu, select Latin-1. The symbol is in the 7th row, 16th column from the left (about half-way); 2) Press Cntrl + /o (Press and hold the Control key plus the "/" key then type the lower case letter "o".)
world. To name just two, the US keyboard differs substantially from the UK keyboard. So since we can't see your keyboard, we can't tell what key is below the escape key on *your* keyboard. On *my* keyboard (a US one) that key is a grave accent, and a tilde (~) when shifted. From your description that doesn't seem to be what you have, so I
Symbol (as shown at the beginning of Suzanne's link), in the dropdown at the upper right go to "Combining Diacritics," and you'll find a "dot over" character that will sit on top of the letter that precedes it. (You can also assign a keyboard shortcut to it if you're going to use it a lot.) You'll also find several widths of overbars, and lots
would have an Australian regional setting with a US pattern keyboard. Such a keyboard configuration would has the # symbol at Shift+3. To type £ you need to press Alt+Ctrl+Shift+4. You can however change the regional settings to indicate to that you have a UK pattern keyboard which will put the £ sign at Shift+3, and there will be other ...
Insert > Symbol dialog, set the font to "normal text", the "From" dropdown in the lower right to Unicode, and the "Subset" dropdown in the upper right to Basic Greek; then locate the chi between phi and psi. In recent versions of Word, instead of using the dialog, you can type the number 03c7 in the document and press Alt+X to insert the chi.
Besides the "latin letter capital O with stroke" Ø (U+00D8) that Ed mentioned, there's also a diameter symbol in some fonts: U+2205 (type 2205,
While a "null symbol" may not literally exist, there is a symbol for the mathematical concept of a "null set" or "empty set". It's in the Arial Unicode MS font as character 2205. And, contrary to Ed G's statement earlier, it is not a zero with a vertical slash, it's a circle with a diagonal slash.
You don't want a caret (which is the ^ symbol), you want an acute accent as in Renée. There are several ways to enter the single character é : - Hold down the Alt key while you type 0233 on the number pad (with NumLock on). This works in all Windows programs; the others work only in Word.
Either enter a 3 and use Format, Font, Superscript, or Use Insert Symbol and this cubed is in the basic character set, or press Alt+0179.
The characters you want are present in Arial Unicode as 1E0D (d), 1E63 (s), 1E6D (t), and 1E93 (z). Uppercase versions are also available.