Ò
Ò ò |
Ò ò |
Ò, ò (o-grave) is a letter in Catalan, Emilian-Romagnol, Lombard, Occitan, Kashubian, Scottish Gaelic, Taos, Vietnamese, Haitian Creole, and Welsh. It also appears in Italian as a variant of o.
Usage in various languages
Kashubian
Ò is the 28th letter of the Kashubian alphabet and represents /wɛ/.
Vietnamese
In the Vietnamese alphabet, ò is the huyền tone (falling tone) of “o”.
Chinese
In Chinese pinyin, ò is the yángqù tone (阳去, falling tone) of “o”.
Welsh
In Welsh, the grave accent is used on o to denote a short [ɔ] sound in a word that would otherwise be pronounced with a long [oː] sound: còd [kɔd] "cod" versus cod [koːd] "code".
Italian
In Italian, the grave accent is used over any vowel to indicate word-final stress: Niccolò (equivalent of Nicholas and the forename of Machiavelli). It can also be used on nonfinal vowels to indicate that the stress falls there or whether an o or an e is open or closed: còrso, "Corsican", vs. córso, "course"/"run", past participle of "correre"). Ò always represents the open-mid back rounded vowel.
Emilian-Romagnol
In Emilian, ò is used to represent [ɔː], e.g. òs [ɔːs] "bone". In Romagnol it is used to represent [ɔ], e.g. piò [pjɔ] "more".
Character mappings
Character | Ò | ò | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Unicode name | LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH GRAVE | LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH GRAVE | ||
Encodings | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
Unicode | 210 | U+00D2 | 242 | U+00F2 |
UTF-8 | 195 146 | C3 92 | 195 178 | C3 B2 |
Numeric character reference | Ò | Ò | ò | ò |
Named character reference | Ò | ò | ||
ISO 8859-1, 3, 9, 14, 15, 16 | 210 | D2 | 242 | F2 |