Ͷ
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Ancient Greek
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]A glyph development from the Phoenician letter 𐤅 (w, “waw”) in several epichoric alphabets, wherein Ͷ denoted the archaic phoneme /w/, which was elsewhere denoted by Ϝ (W, “digamma”). In the Pamphylian Greek dialect, /w/ gained the allophone [v]; consequently, Ϝ (W) was adopted to mark the distinction (albeit inconsistently), with Ͷ denoting the original [w] and Ϝ (W) denoting the novel phone [v].
Pronunciation
[edit]Letter
[edit]Ͷ • (W) (upper case, lower case ͷ)
- (Pamphylian) digamma, denoting a voiced labio-velar approximant, and sorted between epsilon and zeta
Etymology 2
[edit]An alteration of Ϻ (S, “san”); it occurred in the Arcadocypriot Greek dialect of Mantinea in Arcadia, wherein it is believed that it denoted a reflex of the Proto-Greek phoneme */kʷ/, intermediate between it and the later Arcadocypriot /sː/.
Pronunciation
[edit]Letter
[edit]Ͷ • (Ts) (upper case, lower case ͷ)
- (Arcadocypriot) tsan, denoting an voiceless alveolar affricate; its sorting order is not known
Etymology 3
[edit]Applied due to the resemblance of the Melian glyph to the Unicode reference glyph shared by the Pamphylian digamma and Arcadocypriot tsan.
Letter
[edit]Ͷ • (B) (upper case, lower case ͷ)
- (nonstandard) an allograph of Β occurring in inscriptions from the isle of Melos