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In LaTeX text mode the math method above is inappropriate, as letters will be in math italic, so the command n\textsuperscript{th} will give n th and A\textsubscript{base} will give A base (textual subscripts are rare, so \textsubscript is not built-in, but requires the fixltx2e package). As in other systems, when using UTF-8 encoding, the ...
Shaded cells mark small capitals that are not very distinct from minuscules, and Greek letters that are indistinguishable from Latin, and so would not be expected to be supported by Unicode. Little punctuation is encoded. Parentheses are shown above in the basic block above, and the exclamation mark ꜝ is shown
These could also be used to make the important words on signs larger. In technical terms, the superior letter can also be called the superscripted minuscule letter. In modern usage, with word processors and text entry interfaces, superscript and superior letters are produced in the same way and look identical. Their distinction would refer to ...
Latin Small Letter F with dot above 0652 U+1E20 Ḡ Latin Capital Letter G with macron U+1E21 ḡ Latin Small Letter G with macron U+1E22 Ḣ Latin Capital Letter H with dot above U+1E23 ḣ Latin Small Letter H with dot above U+1E24 Ḥ Latin Capital Letter H with dot below: U+1E25 ḥ Latin Small Letter H with dot below U+1E26 Ḧ
Small capital L with dot above: ʟ̣: Small capital L with dot below 𝼄 𐞜 Small capital L with belt: ExtIPA (unvoiced lateral fricative); [18] Superscript form is an IPA superscript letter [18] [19] Lambda: Salishan and Wakashan languages [44] ƛ: Lambda with stroke: Salishan and Wakashan languages, [44] Americanist phonetic ...
Circled Latin capital letter C ¤ Currency sign: Square lozenge ("Pillow") various Currency symbols † ‡ Dagger: Obelus: Footnotes, Latin cross – — Dash: Hyphen, Hyphen-minus, minus sign: Em dash, En dash ° Degree sign: Masculine ordinal indicator * * * Dinkus: Asterism, Fleuron, Dingbat (many) Dingbat: Dinkus, Fleuron ⌀ Diameter
Keraia" is a hook or serif, and in Matthew 5:18 may refer to Greek diacritics, or, if the reference is to the Hebrew text of the Torah, possibly refers to the pen strokes that distinguish between similar Hebrew letters, e.g., ב versus כ , [6] or to ornamental pen strokes attached to certain Hebrew letters, [7] or to the Hebrew letter Vav ...
Historically the unique letter Ü and U-diaeresis were written as a U with two dots above the letter. U-umlaut was written as a U with a small e written above (Uͤ uͤ): this minute e degenerated to two vertical bars in medieval handwritings. In most later handwritings these bars in turn nearly became dots.