T with stroke explained
Ŧ (lowercase: ŧ, Latin alphabet), known as T with stroke or T with bar, is the 25th letter in the Northern Sámi alphabet, where it represents the voiceless dental fricative pronounced as /[θ]/.[1] In the SENĆOŦEN alphabet, it represents [s̪].[2] It is also used in the Hualapai alphabet.[3] It is also used in several orthographies for African languages, e.g., for Hassaniya Arabic in Senegal.[4] The Unicode codepoints for this letter are and .[5] Other letters with a stroke include ǥ, ħ, đ, ł, and ø.
See also
Notes and References
- Book: Kahn. Lily. North Sámi: An Essential Grammar. Riita-Liisa. Valijärvi. Taylor & Francis. 2017. 978-1-317-55811-8. Milton Park, England. 15. 2021-10-28.
- Web site: How to pronounce SENĆOŦEN. 2021-10-28. Saanich.montler.net.
- Book: Watahomigie. Lucille J.. Hualapai Reference Grammar. Bender. Jorigine. Yamamoto. Akira Y.. 1982. American Indian Studies Center, UCLA. 978-0-935626-07-0. en.
- Web site: Decret n° 2005-980 du 21 octobre 2005 . 2021-12-10 . 2015-05-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150518092122/http://www.jo.gouv.sn/spip.php?article4790 . dead .
- Web site: Latin Extended-A : Range: 0100–017F. PDF. Unicode.org. 2021-12-09.