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Oi / ɔɪ / is an interjection used in various varieties of the English language, particularly Australian English, British English, Indian English, Irish English, New Zealand English, and South African English, as well as non-English languages such as Chinese, Tagalog, Tamil, Hindi/Urdu, Italian, Japanese, and Portuguese to get the attention of another person or to express surprise or disapproval.
Despite that, some modern writings [5] still use it. Handbook of the International Phonetic Association defines [ɪ] as a mid-centralized (lowered and centralized) close front unrounded vowel (transcribed [i̽] or [ï̞]), and the current official IPA name of the vowel transcribed with the symbol ɪ is a near-close near-front unrounded vowel. [6]
This vocalic w generally represented /uː/, [3] [4] as in wss ("use"). [5] However at that time the form w was still sometimes used to represent a digraph uu (see W), not as a separate letter. In modern Welsh, "W" is simply a single letter which often represents a vowel sound. Thus words borrowed from Welsh may use w this way, such as:
In Kazakh, the letter is used to represent a short ɪ sound (e.g. берейік (tr. (Let us) give)). The letter, much like the other 11 Cyrillic letters, does not have another Latin version and merges with Ии . In Serbo-Croatian and Macedonian, the Cyrillic letter Јe is used to represent the same sound.
Sometimes, it is possible to "see" anagrams in words, unaided by tools, though the more letters involved the more difficult this becomes. The difficulty is that for a word of n different letters, there are n! (factorial of n) different permutations and so n! − 1 different anagrams of the word. Anagram dictionaries can also be used. Computer ...
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In ASCII, the letters PNG, allowing a person to identify the format easily if it is viewed in a text editor. 0D 0A: A DOS-style line ending (CRLF) to detect DOS-Unix line ending conversion of the data. 1A: A byte that stops display of the file under DOS when the command type has been used—the end-of-file character. 0A