T with stroke
Ŧ (lowercase: ŧ, Latin alphabet), known as T with a bar or T with a stroke sign, is the 25th letter in the Northern Sámi alphabet, where it represents the voiceless dental fricative [θ]. In the SENĆOŦEN alphabet, it also represents a [θ]. It is also used in the Havasupai alphabet, and to represent the letter ט in romanizations of Hebrew. The Unicode codepoints for this letter are U+0166 Ŧ LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T WITH STROKE and U+0167 ŧ LATIN SMALL LETTER T WITH STROKE.
Computing code
Preview | Ŧ | ŧ | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Unicode name | LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T WITH STROKE | LATIN SMALL LETTER T WITH STROKE | ||
Encodings | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
Unicode | 358 | U+0166 | 359 | U+0167 |
UTF-8 | 197 166 | C5 A6 | 197 167 | C5 A7 |
Numeric character reference | Ŧ | Ŧ | ŧ | ŧ |
Named character reference | Ŧ | ŧ |
gollark: There is the "thou shalt not kill" thing, although that does tend to be... mostly ignored.
gollark: I dislike China, but that doesn't mean I have something against individual Chinese people.
gollark: ... yes?
gollark: You can dislike a country without disliking its majority ethnic group, you know?
gollark: I mean, there are natural resources in lots of countries.
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