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Pages in category "Letters with stroke" The following 49 pages are in this category, out of 49 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B ...
A bar or stroke is a modification consisting of a line drawn through a grapheme. It may be used as a diacritic to derive new letters from old ones, or simply as an addition to make a grapheme more distinct from others. It can take the form of a vertical bar, slash, or crossbar.
Astronomical symbols – Symbols in astronomy; Chemical symbol – Abbreviations used in chemistry; Chinese punctuation – Punctuation used with Chinese characters; Currency symbol – Symbol used to represent a monetary currency's name; Diacritic – Modifier mark added to a letter (accent marks etc.)
The slash is a slanting line punctuation mark /.It is also known as a stroke, a solidus, a forward slash and several other historical or technical names.Once used as the equivalent of the modern period and comma, the slash is now used to represent division and fractions, as a date separator, or to connect alternative terms.
The central stroke of an s is known as the spine. [6] When the stroke is part of a lowercase [4] and rises above the height of an x (the x height), it is known as an ascender. [7] Letters with ascenders are b d f h k l. A stroke which drops below the baseline is a descender. [7] Letters with descenders are g j p q y.
English: Latin small letter g (single-storey or opentail) with stroke through descender, superseded IPA symbol for [ɣ] (voiced velar fricative). Also known as "single-loop g with stroke". Superseded double-loop g in 1900, superseded by gamma [ɣ] between 1928 and 1930.
Latin Capital Letter L with stroke: 0257 U+0142 ł 322 ł Latin Small Letter L with stroke 0258 U+0143 Ń 323 Ń Latin Capital Letter N with acute: 0259 U+0144 ń 324 ń Latin Small Letter N with acute 0260 U+0145 Ņ 325 Ņ Latin Capital Letter N with cedilla 0261 U+0146 ņ 326 ņ Latin Small Letter N with cedilla 0262
[citation needed] Other times it is a single stroke with a diagonal line connecting the bottom to the left side. This was a version of shorthand for ampersand, and the stroke economy of this version provided ease of writing for workers while also assuring the character was distinct from other numeric or alphabetic symbols.