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Latin Small Letter N 0079 U+006F o 111 0157 Latin Small Letter O 0080 U+0070 p 112 0160 Latin Small Letter P 0081 U+0071 q 113 0161 Latin Small Letter Q 0082 U+0072 r 114 0162 Latin Small Letter R 0083 U+0073 s 115 0163 Latin Small Letter S 0084 U+0074 t 116 0164 Latin Small Letter T 0085 U+0075 u 117 0165 Latin Small Letter U 0086 U+0076 v 118
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]
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
latin small letter o with diaeresis ÷ u+00f7: 246: 0247: division sign ø u+00f8: 155: 0248: latin small letter o with stroke ù u+00f9: 151: 0249: latin small letter u with grave ú u+00fa: 163: 0250: latin small letter u with acute û u+00fb: 150: 0251: latin small letter u with circumflex ü u+00fc: 129: 0252: latin small letter u with ...
The block has sixteen standardized variants defined to specify emoji-style (U+FE0F VS16) or text presentation (U+FE0E VS15) for the eight emoji. [ 10 ] Emoji variation sequences
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]
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A variant of the above theory claims that the sign comes from the mark of the mint at Potosí, where a large portion of the Spanish Empire's silver was mined. A feature on these coins were the letters "P T S I" superimposed. The core of this monogram is a (single-stroked) "$" sign. [17] Sample ledger with a sign for dollar from John Collins 1686