Latin epsilon

Latin epsilon or open e (majuscule: Ɛ, minuscule: ɛ) is a letter of the extended Latin alphabet, based on the lowercase of the Greek letter epsilon (ε). It occurs in the orthographies of many Niger–Congo languages, such as Ewe, Akan, and Lingala, and is included in the African reference alphabet.

In the Berber Latin alphabet currently used in Algerian Berber school books,[1] and before that proposed by the French institute INALCO, it represents a voiced pharyngeal fricative [ʕ]. Some authors use ƹayin ƹ instead; both letters are similar in shape with the Arabic ʿayn ع.

The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) uses various forms of the Latin epsilon:

The Uralic Phonetic Alphabet uses various forms of the Latin epsilon:[2]

  • U+1D08 LATIN SMALL LETTER TURNED OPEN E
  • U+1D4B MODIFIER LETTER SMALL OPEN E
  • U+1D4C MODIFIER LETTER SMALL TURNED OPEN E

Unicode

Latin epsilon is called "Open E" in Unicode.[3]

Character information
PreviewƐɛ
Unicode nameLATIN CAPITAL LETTER OPEN ELATIN SMALL LETTER OPEN E
Encodingsdecimalhexdecimalhex
Unicode400U+0190603U+025B
UTF-8198 144C6 90201 155C9 9B
Numeric character referenceƐƐɛɛ


It looks similar to the lowercase epsilon.
gollark: I don't know if it's been tested empirically, but my wild speculation is that most data storage would actually hold up basically okay.
gollark: IIRC EMPs mostly induce currents in longer wires.
gollark: Doubtful, datacentres have a lot of backup power and mostly use nonvolatile memory.
gollark: It says "through disease or starvation", which sounds right.
gollark: Over the long term, no electricity means industrial farming and water supply collapse.

References

  1. http://www.freemorocco.com/tamazight-dzayer.html
  2. Everson, Michael; et al. (2002-03-20). "L2/02-141: Uralic Phonetic Alphabet characters for the UCS" (PDF).
  3. Asmus Freytag; Rick McGowan; Ken Whistler (2006-05-08). "Unicode Technical Note #27: Known Anomalies in Unicode Character Names". The Unicode Consortium. Retrieved 2009-02-24. This is actually a Latin epsilon and should have been so called.


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