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  2. Word-initial ff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word-initial_ff

    The English legal handwriting of the Middle Ages has no capital F. A double f (ff) was used to represent the capital letter. In transcribing, I should write F, not ff; e. g. Fiske, not ffiske. The replacement of manuscript word-initial ff by F is now a scholarly convention. [3] Usage in names such as Charles ffoulkes and Richard ffrench ...

  3. Sound and language in Middle-earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_and_language_in...

    He had a private theory that the sound of words was directly connected to their meaning, and that certain sounds were inherently beautiful. Scholars believe he intentionally chose words and names in his constructed Middle-earth languages to create feelings such as of beauty, longing, and strangeness. Tolkien stated that he wrote his stories to ...

  4. List of Latin-script letters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin-script_letters

    Bosnian, Croatian, Jarai, Katu, Sámi (except Lule and Southern), Vietnamese, Middle Persian Transliteration Đ̣ đ̣: D with stroke and dot below: Inari Sami: Đ̱ đ̱: D with stroke and line below: Middle Persian Transliteration ᵭ D with middle tilde 𝼥 D with mid-height left hook

  5. Arabic script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabic_script

    The script has particular letters to represent the peculiar sounds of Malayalam. This script is mainly used in madrasas of the South Indian state of Kerala and of Lakshadweep . Rohingya language (Ruáingga) is a language spoken by the Rohingya people of Rakhine State, formerly known as Arakan (Rakhine), Burma (Myanmar).

  6. Transliteration of Ancient Egyptian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliteration_of_Ancient...

    Yod (, i with a Semitistic aleph instead of the dot, both yod and alef being considered possible sound values in the 19th century). [ 5 ] Although three Egyptological and Ugariticist letters were proposed in August 2000, [ 6 ] it was not until 2008 ( Unicode 5.1 ) two of the three letters were encoded: aleph and ayin (minor and capital).

  7. F - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F

    It is often doubled at the end of words. Exceptionally, it represents the voiced labiodental fricative / v / in the common word "of" and its derivatives. F is the eleventh least frequently used letter in the English language (after G, Y, P, B, V, K, J, X, Q, and Z), with a frequency of about 2.23% in words.

  8. Arabic phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabic_phonology

    While many languages have numerous dialects that differ in phonology, contemporary spoken Arabic is more properly described as a continuum of varieties. [1] This article deals primarily with Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), which is the standard variety shared by educated speakers throughout Arabic-speaking regions.

  9. ß - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ß

    By the late 1400s, the choice of spelling between sz and ss was usually based on the sound's position in the word rather than etymology: sz ( ſz ) tended to be used in word final position: uſz (Middle High German: ûz, German: aus), -nüſz (Middle High German: -nüss(e), German: -nis); ss ( ſſ ) tended to be used when the sound occurred ...