LETTER (ALPHABET)

''A Specimen'' of typeset fonts and languages, by William Caslon, letter founder; from the 1728 ''Cyclopaedia''.

Ancient Greek letters on a vase

A 'letter' is an element in an alphabetic system of writing, such as the Greek alphabet and its descendants. Each letter in the written language is usually associated with one or two phonemes (sounds) in the spoken form of the language. Written signs in earlier writings are best called syllabograms (which denote a syllable) or logograms (which denote a word or phrase).

Contents
Overview and usage
History
Types of letters
Various scripts
Upper and lower case
Typeface and font
See also
References
Web links

Overview and usage


As symbols that denote segmental speech, letters are associated with phonetics. In a purely phonemic alphabet, a single phoneme is denoted by a single letter, but in history and practice letters often denote more than one phoneme. A pair of letters designating a single phoneme is called a digraph. Examples of digraphs in English include ch, sh and th. A phoneme can also be represented by three letters, called a trigraph. An example is the combination "sch" in German.
A letter may also be associated with more than one phoneme, with the phoneme depending on the surrounding letters or etymology of the word. As an example of positional effects, the Spanish letter 'c' is pronounced [k] before ''a'', ''o'', or ''u'' (e.g. ''cantar'', ''corto'', ''cuidado''), but is pronounced [s] before ''e'' or ''i'' (e.g. ''centimo'', ''ciudad'').
Letters also have specific names associated with them. These names may differ with language, dialect and history. Z, for example, is usually called ''zed'' in all English-speaking countries except the U.S., where it is named ''zee''.
Letters, as elements of alphabets, have prescribed orders. This may generally be known as "alphabetical order" though collation is the science devoted to the complex task of ordering and sorting of letters and words in different languages. In Spanish, for instance, ñ is a separate letter being sorted after n. In English, n and ñ are sorted alike.
Letters may also have numerical value. This is true of Roman numerals and the letters of other writing systems. In English, Arabic numerals are typically used instead of letters.

History


The invention of letters was preceded by the West Semitic script, which appeared in Canaan around 1000 BC. Antecedents are suspected in the Proto-Canaanite writing, dated to around 1800 BC, Virtually all alphabets have their ultimate origins from this system. The Greek alphabet was invented around 800 BC.

Types of letters


Various scripts

The following "alphabets" (not all are alphabets) and individual letters are discussed in related articles. Each represents a different script:
Arabic alphabet: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Cyrillic alphabet: Ð, Б, Ð’, Г, Ò, Д, Е, Є, Ж, З, И, І, Ї, Й, К, Л, М, Ð, О, П, Р, С, Т, У, Ф, Ð¥, Ц, Ч, Ш, Щ, Ю, Я, Ъ, Ь, Ђ, Љ, Њ, Ћ, Ð
Greek alphabet: Α, Î’, Γ, Δ, Ε, Ζ, Η, Θ, Ι, Κ, Λ, Μ, Î, Ξ, Ο, Π, Ρ, Σ, Τ, Î¥, Φ, Χ, Ψ, Ω.
Hebrew alphabet: ×, ב, ×’, ד, ×”, ו, ×–, ×—, ט, ×™, ×›, ל, מ, × , ס, ×¢, פ, צ, ×§, ר, ש, ת.
Latin alphabet: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z.
For other writing systems and their letters, see List of writing systems and List of alphabets.
A Cyrillic letter Я shown in upper and lower case, and in italics

Upper and lower case

Main articles: Letter case, Capital letters, Lower case

Some writing systems have two major forms for each letter: an ''upper case'' form (also called ''capital'' or ''majuscule'') and a ''lower case'' form (also called ''minuscule''). Upper and lower case forms represent the same sound, but serve different functions in writing. Capital letters are most often used at the beginning of a sentence, as the first letter of a proper name, or in inscriptions or headers. They may also serve other functions, such as in the German language where all nouns begin with capital letters.
Typeface and font

Main articles: Typeface

A letter may be printed in a number of different sizes or forms, depending on choice of typeface. A typeface is a single, stylistically consistent set of forms for letters (or glyphs). A particular typeface may alter standard forms of characters, may present them with different optical weight, or may angle or embellish their forms. A font is more specific than a typeface, since it specifies the size of the letters as well as the form.

See also



Glyphs

Letterform

Abecedarium

Typeface

Alphabets derived from the Latin

Artificial script

Diacritic

Greek letters used in mathematics

Ligature

★ Omniglot

Roman letters used in mathematics

History of the alphabet

Digraph (orthography)

Alphabet

Orthography

Collation

Unicode

References



Daniels, Peter T., and William Bright, eds. 1996. The World's Writing Systems. ISBN 0-19-507993-0.

Powell, Barry B.. 1991. Homer and the Origin of the Greek Alphabet. ISBN-13: 9780521589079 | ISBN-10: 052158907X.

Web links



decodeunicode.org Wiki with all 98,884 Unicode characters (german/english, full text search)

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves