Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Latin Small Letter U with tilde 0297 U+016A Ū 362 Ū Latin Capital Letter U with macron 0298 U+016B ū 363 ū Latin Small Letter U with macron 0299 U+016C Ŭ 364 Ŭ Latin Capital Letter U with breve: 0300 U+016D ŭ 365 ŭ Latin Small Letter U with breve 0301 U+016E Ů 366 Ů Latin Capital Letter U with ring above 0302
U+2113 ℓ SCRIPT SMALL L; "despite its character name, this symbol is derived from a special italicized version of the small letter l". [6] It has various other specialized uses, such as a liter symbol and as the azimuthal quantum number symbol. U+2118 ℘ SCRIPT CAPITAL P is a symbol for Weierstrass's elliptic function. [7]
Paragraph mark, paragraph sign, paraph, alinea, or blind P: Section sign ('Silcrow') ⌑ Pillow (non-Unicode name) 'Pillow' is an informal nick-name for the 'Square lozenge' in the travel industry. The generic currency sign is superficially similar | Pipe (non-Unicode name) (Unicode name is "vertical bar") + Plus sign
U+FB29: ﬩: HEBREW LETTER ALTERNATIVE PLUS SIGN Small Form Variants block; U+FE61 ﹡ SMALL ASTERISK ... 𝓃 𝓅 𝓆 𝓇 𝓈 𝓉 𝓊 𝓋 𝓌 𝓍 𝓎
Additional superscript capitals are ᴭ ᴯ ᴲ ᴻ. Some of these are small caps in the source documents in the Unicode proposals. Superscript capital s has been proposed for a future version of the Unicode Standard. [8] [9] Superscript versons of small capital A and E have been proposed for a future version of the Unicode Standard. [10] [11] [9]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
The BOM, encoded as U+FEFF ZERO WIDTH NO-BREAK SPACE, has the important property of unambiguity on byte reorder, regardless of the Unicode encoding used; U+FFFE (the result of byte-swapping U+FEFF) does not equate to a legal character, and U+FEFF in places other than the beginning of text conveys the zero-width non-break space.
Greek letters are used in mathematics, science, engineering, and other areas where mathematical notation is used as symbols for constants, special functions, and also conventionally for variables representing certain quantities. In these contexts, the capital letters and the small letters represent distinct and unrelated entities.