This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (February 2024) |
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 of /g/, representing the sound /ŋ/
- Filipino alphabet – during the Spanish colonial period and up to the mid-20th century, adopting Spanish orthography for the Tagalog language
- Sumerian language – an extinct language, where it is used to transcribe the cuneiform script.
- Northern Sámi orthography – g̃ appears in the Sámi alphabet used by Rask in Ræsonneret lappisk sproglære in 1832
The letter is also occasionally used as a (stylistic) substitute for G with breve (Ğ) in languages such as Turkish.[citation needed]
Computer encoding
editUnicode 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 omit the diacritic altogether.[1]
Letter | Unicode sequence | HTML | Windows[a] |
---|---|---|---|
G̃ | U+0047 U+0303 | G̃ | G303 Alt+X |
g̃ | U+0067 U+0303 | g̃ | g303 Alt+X |
Notes
edit- ^ Subject to application
References
edit- ^ 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.