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Considered as a new letter, placed between Т and У. 040D: Ѝ: CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER I WITH GRAVE 0418 0300: 045D: ѝ: CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER I WITH GRAVE 0438 0300: Used mostly in Bulgarian and Macedonian. Not considered a separate letter, but merely the letter И with a grave accent. 040E: Ў: CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER SHORT U 0423 0306: 045E: ў
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 15 January 2025. See also: List of Cyrillic multigraphs Main articles: Cyrillic script, Cyrillic alphabets, and Early Cyrillic alphabet This article contains special characters. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols. This is a list of letters of the ...
Latin Small Letter C with acute 0199 U+0108 Ĉ 264 Ĉ Latin Capital Letter C with circumflex: 0200 U+0109 ĉ 265 ĉ Latin Small Letter C with circumflex 0201 U+010A Ċ 266 Ċ Latin Capital Letter C with dot above: 0202 U+010B ċ 267 ċ Latin Small Letter C with dot above 0203 U+010C Č 268 Č Latin Capital Letter C with ...
Circled Latin capital letter C ¤ Currency sign: Square lozenge ("Pillow") various Currency symbols † ‡ Dagger: Obelus: Footnotes, Latin cross – — Dash: Hyphen, Hyphen-minus, minus sign: Em dash, En dash ° Degree sign: Masculine ordinal indicator * * * Dinkus: Asterism, Fleuron, Dingbat (many) Dingbat: Dinkus, Fleuron ⌀ Diameter
The grapheme Ć (minuscule: ć), formed from C with the addition of an acute accent, is used in various languages. It usually denotes [t͡ɕ], the voiceless alveolo-palatal affricate, including in phonetic transcription. Its Unicode codepoints are U+0106 for Ć and U+0107 for ć.
For example, U+0308 ̈ COMBINING DIAERESIS may combine either with U+0065 e LATIN SMALL LETTER E to create a Latin ë or with U+0435 е CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER IE for the Cyrillic ё. In the former case, it inherits the Latin script of the base character, whereas in the latter case, it inherits the Cyrillic script of the base character.
The reserved code points (the "holes") in the alphabetic ranges up to U+1D551 duplicate characters in the Letterlike Symbols block. In order, these are ℎ / ℬ ℰ ℱ ℋ ℐ ℒ ℳ ℛ / ℯ ℊ ℴ / ℭ ℌ ℑ ℜ ℨ / ℂ ℍ ℕ ℙ ℚ ℝ ℤ.
The spacing diacritic should be used for a baseline letter with a superscript release, such as [tˢʼ] or [kˣʼ], where the scope of the apostrophe includes the non-superscript letter, but the combining apostrophe U+315 might be used to indicate a weakly articulated ejective consonant like [ᵗ̕] or [ᵏ̕], where the whole consonant is ...