When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Greek diacritics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_diacritics

    While the tónos of monotonic orthography looks similar to the oxeîa of polytonic orthography in most typefaces, Unicode has historically separate symbols for letters with these diacritics. For example, the monotonic "Greek small letter alpha with tónos" is at U+03AC, while the polytonic "Greek small letter alpha with oxeîa" is at U+

  3. History of the alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_alphabet

    Many Greek letters are similar to Phoenician, except the letter direction is reversed or changed, which can be the result of historical changes from right-to-left writing to boustrophedon, then to left-to-right writing. Global distribution of the Cyrillic alphabet. The dark green areas shows the countries where this alphabet is the sole main ...

  4. Noncontracting grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noncontracting_grammar

    Chomsky (1959) introduced the Chomsky hierarchy, in which context-sensitive grammars occur as "type 1" grammars; general noncontracting grammars do not occur. [2]Chomsky (1963) calls a noncontracting grammar a "type 1 grammar", and a context-sensitive grammar a "type 2 grammar", and by presenting a conversion from the former into the latter, proves the two weakly equivalent.

  5. History through alphabet letters - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/history-alphabet-letters...

    Jun. 9—I'll always remember the alphabet letter pictures. For now, they cover our home office like wallpaper, colored by you: my sensitive, soon-to-be former kindergartener. They're an exercise ...

  6. History of the Latin script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Latin_script

    The main examples were the Italian hand and the English round-hand, which in Britain were taught to men and women respectively, these scripts feature flowing letters which could be written with a single pen lift (with the exception of x and the marks added after writing the word which were dots on i and j and the bar of the ascender of t) with ...

  7. Meroitic script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meroitic_script

    Griffith identified the essential abugida nature of Meroitic when he deciphered the script in 1911. He noted in 1916 that certain consonant letters were never followed by a vowel letter, and varied with other consonant letters. He interpreted them as syllabic, with the values ne, se, te, and to. Ne, for example, varied with na.

  8. Merovingian script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merovingian_script

    The Luxeuil type uses distinctive long, slim capital letters as a display script. These capitals have wedge-shaped finials, and the crossbar of a resembles a small letter v while that of h is a wavy line. The letter o is often written as a diamond shape, with a smaller o written inside.

  9. Gregg shorthand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg_shorthand

    Gregg Shorthand Alphabet, with letters and words from Esperanto. Gregg shorthand is a system of phonography, or a phonemic writing system, which means it records the sounds of the speaker, not the English spelling. [4] For example, it uses the f stroke for the / f / sound in funnel, telephone, and laugh, [8] and omits all silent letters. [4]