'K' is the eleventh letter of the modern
Latin alphabet. Its name in
English is pronounced ''kay'' . In English words, it generally represents the sound , but is
silent when followed by an ''n'', in words like ''knowing''.
History and usage
| Egyptian hieroglyph D | Proto-Semitic K | Phoenician K | Etruscan K | Greek Kappa |
|---|
| d |  Proto-semiticK-01.png |  PhoenicianK-01.png |  EtruscanK-01.png | |
It comes from the Greek
Κ or
κ (Kappa) developed from the Semitic Kap, symbol for an open hand. This in turn was likely adapted by Semites who had lived in Egypt, from the hieroglyph for "hand" representing D for the Egyptian word for hand, ''d-r-t''. The Semites evidently assigned it the sound value instead, because their word for hand started with that sound.
The Semitic value of was maintained in most classical as well as modern languages, although Latin abandoned the use of K almost completely, preferring
C. When
Greek words were taken into Latin, the Kappa was converted to C; Latin used K for other languages such as
Etruscan, as seen in words such as
''kalendae'', "first day of the month", whence English
calendar. Some words from other alphabets were also transliterated into C. Therefore, the
Romance languages have K only in words from still other language groups. The
Celtic languages also chose C over K, and this influence carried over into
Old English. Today, English is the only
Germanic language to productively use hard C in addition to K.
Some English linguists prefer to reverse the Latin transliteration process for proper names in Greek, spelling ''
Hecate'' as "Hekate", for example. And the writing down of languages that don't have their own alphabet with the Latin one has resulted in a standardization of the letter for this sound, as in ''Kwakiutl.''
Sometimes, in
advertising it is used instead of C.
[1]
In the
International phonetic alphabet, [k] is the symbol for the
voiceless velar plosive.
Several other alphabets also use characters with sharp angles to indicate the sound or syllables that start with a , for example:
Arabic Ùƒ,
Hebrew ×› (in some fonts),
Korean ㄱ. This kind of phonetic-visual association was studied by
Wolfgang Köhler. However, there are also many examples of rounded letters for , like ค in
Thai and Õ” in
Armenian.
Codes for computing
In
Unicode the
capital K is codepoint U+004B and the
lowercase k is U+006B.
The
ASCII code for capital K is 75 and for lowercase k is 107; or in
binary 01001011 and 01101011, correspondingly.
The
EBCDIC code for capital K is 210, and for lowercase k, 146.
The
numeric character references in
HTML and
XML are "
K" and "
k" for upper and lower case respectively.
Meanings of K
:''See
K (disambiguation).''
Notes
1. Example at Bannertherapy.com
See also
★
Ƙ (hooked K)
★
К, the Cyrillic letter ka