-
meaning of how ⟨ ⟩, | |, / /, and [ ] are used here, see this page. The
grave accent (◌̀) (/ɡreɪv/
GRAYV or /ɡrɑːv/ GRAHV) is a
diacritical mark used to varying...
- The
double grave accent (◌̏) is a
diacritic used in
scholarly discussions of the Serbo-Croatian and
sometimes Slovene languages. It is also used in the...
- (tónos) '
accent') is the
standard system for
Ancient Gr**** and
Medieval Gr**** and includes:
acute accent (´) cir****flex
accent (ˆ)
grave accent (`); these...
- It is also
known as backquote,
grave, or
grave accent. The
character was
designed for
typewriters to add a
grave accent to a (lower-case) base letter,...
- diacritics, such as the
acute ⟨ó⟩,
grave ⟨ò⟩, and cir****flex ⟨ô⟩ (all
shown above an 'o'), are
often called accents.
Diacritics may
appear above or below...
- French. The
acute is used on é. It is
known as
accent aigu, in
contrast to the
accent grave which is the
accent sloped the
other way. It
distinguishes é [e]...
- the key for the
vowel requiring the
accent. The
grave-
accented letters à, è, and ù (as well as the acute-
accented é),
which are part of
French orthography...
-
languages consisting of the
letter A of the ISO
basic Latin alphabet and a
grave accent. À is also used in
Pinyin transliteration. In most languages, it represents...
- Gr****
accent is
believed to have been a
melodic or
pitch accent. In
Ancient Gr****, one of the
final three syllables of each word
carries an
accent. Each...
-
acute and
grave accents (^), as it
marked a
syllable contracted from two vowels: an acute-
accented vowel and a non-
accented vowel (all non-
accented syllables...