Bar (diacritic)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Diacritical marks |
---|
accent
breve ( ˘ )
hook / dấu hỏi ( ̉ ) |
Marks sometimes used as diacritics |
apostrophe ( ’ ) |
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.
A stroke is sometimes drawn through the numbers 7 and 0, to make them more distinguishable.
In phonetic transcription, a stroke through a letter often indicates that the sound is a fricative.
For the specific usages of various letters with bars and strokes, see their individual articles:
Contents |
[edit] Latin alphabet
- A → Ⱥ
- B → ƀ
- C → Ȼ ȼ
- D → Ð ð, Đ đ, Ɖ ɖ
- E → E with stroke
- G → Ǥ ǥ
- H → Ħ ħ
- I → Ɨ ɨ, ᵼ
- J → J with stroke, ɟ
- K → K with stroke
- L → Ł ł, Ƚ ƚ
- O → Ø ø, Ɵ ɵ
- P → ᵽ
- Q → Q with stroke
- R → R with stroke
- T → Ŧ ŧ, Ⱦ
- U → ʉ, ᵿ
- Y → Y with stroke
- Z → Ƶ ƶ
- 2 → ƻ
[edit] Cyrillic alphabet
[edit] Arabic alphabet
- Lām → ݪ
- Rāʼ → ݛ
- Wāw → ۅ