Dot (diacritic)

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Template:Short description Template:About Template:Infobox diacritic Template:Contains special characters Template:Orthography notation When used as a diacritic mark, the term dot refers to the glyphs "combining dot above" (Template:Char), and "combining dot below" (Template:Char) which may be combined with some letters of the extended Latin alphabets in use in a variety of languages. Similar marks are used with other scripts.

Overdot

Language scripts or transcription schemes that use the dot above a letter as a diacritical mark:

In mathematics and physics, when using Newton's notation the dot denotes the time derivative as in v=x˙. In addition, the overdot is one way used to indicate an infinitely repeating set of numbers in decimal notation, as in 0.3˙, which is equal to the fraction Template:Frac, and 0.1˙4˙2˙8˙5˙7˙ or 0.1˙42857˙, which is equal to [[142857 (number)|Template:Frac]].

Underdot

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Raised dot and middle dot

Side dot

The diacritics and  , known as Bangjeom (Template:Lang), were used to mark pitch accents in Hangul for Middle Korean. They were written to the left of a syllable in vertical writing and above a syllable in horizontal writing.

Letters with dot

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Encoding

In Unicode, the dot is encoded at:

and at:

There is also:

Pre-composed characters: Template:Div col

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See also

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References

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