Ś
Ś (minuscule: ś) is a letter of the Latin alphabet, formed from S with the addition of an acute accent. It is used in Polish and Montenegrin alphabet, and in certain other languages:
- Slavic languages – usually the palatalized form of /s/
- Polish language – [ɕ] (voiceless alveolo-palatal fricative)
- Montenegrin language – [ɕ]; Cyrillic letter: С́
- In the Belarusian Łacinka alphabet for сь /sʲ/
- In the Ukrainian Latynka for сь /sʲ/
- Lower Sorbian language – [ɕ]
- Transliteration of Sanskrit and modern Indic languages: see the International Alphabet of Sanskrit Transliteration
- Romany alphabet
- Ladin language – word-initial [z] (in Anpezo dialect it represents [z] in all positions)
- transliteration of a palatalized s in the Lydian language
- In Proto-Semitic, a reconstructed voiceless lateral fricative phoneme /ɬ/, the parent phoneme of Ge'ez Śawt ሠ.
- a sibilant phoneme of the earliest phase of the Sumerian language.
- transliteration of a letter of the Etruscan alphabet, related to San and Tsade.
Encodings
The HTML codes are:
- Ś for Ś (upper case)
- ś for ś (lower case)
The Unicode codepoints are U+015A for Ś and U+015B for ś.
gollark: Those outputs are taken as the y values corresponding to the relevant x values.
gollark: The graph is drawn by giving f all the x values on the line (technically there are infinitely many but whatever) and seeing what outputs that produces.
gollark: In this case the output is always 1.
gollark: f maps the given value of x to an output value.
gollark: No.
See also
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