G̃
G̃ / g̃ is a letter which combines the common letter G with a tilde.
The letter does not exist in many alphabets. Examples of alphabets with this letter are:
- Guarani alphabet – where the tilde marks nasalization
- Filipino alphabet – only during the Spanish colonial period and up to the mid-20th century- still used for foreigners learning or high classes work such as college article. (See Filipino orthography#Adoption of the Latin script)
- Sumerian language – an extinct language, where it is used to transcribe the cuneiform script.
- Northern Sami orthography – g̃ appears in the Sami alphabet used by Rask in Ræsonneret lappisk sproglære in 1832
Computer encoding
Unicode encodes g with tilde with a combining diacritical mark (U+0303 ◌̃ COMBINING TILDE), rather than a precomposed character. As such, the tilde may not align properly with some typefaces and systems. Additionally, owing to the difficulties in inputting this character, Guarani speakers often replace it with g with circumflex (ĝ) or omit the diacritic altogether.[1]
Letter | Unicode sequence | HTML |
---|---|---|
G̃ | U+0047 U+0303 | G ̃ |
g̃ | U+0067 U+0303 | g ̃ |
gollark: Space launches are unfortunately rather expensive still.
gollark: Welcome! You can never escape.
gollark: Infiltrate the FAA and cover up evidence of your crimes.
gollark: Oh, or instead of deliberately messing up a survey people may be idiots and/or misread it.
gollark: People do that sometimes.
References
- Redish, Laura; Lewis, Orrin. "Guarani Pronunciation and Spelling Guide". Native Languages of the Americas. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
Most Guarani speakers don't use this character, instead spelling this sound the same as a plain g.
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