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A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Latin alphabet.
See also pages that link to Latin alphabet or to this page.

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  • A (letter) [r]: The first letter of the English and Latin alphabets. [e]
  • Acute accent [r]: A diacritic mark used in many modern written languages with alphabets based on the Latin, Greek and Cyrillic scripts. [e]
  • Alphabet [r]: Writing system in which symbols - single or multiple letters, such as <t> or <ch> - represent phonemes (significant 'sounds') of a language. [e]
  • Aragonese language [r]: Romance language mainly spoken in northern Aragon. [e]
  • B (letter) [r]: The second letter of the English and Latin alphabets. [e]
  • Belarussian language [r]: Slavic language mainly spoken in Belarus. [e]
  • Boomerang [r]: Traditionally a piece of wood that was carved and twisted so that when it was thrown correctly it would return to the thrower. [e]
  • C (disambiguation) [r]: Add brief definition or description
  • C (letter) [r]: The third letter of the English and Latin alphabets. [e]
  • Cherokee language [r]: An Iroquoian language spoken by the Cherokee people which uses a unique syllabary writing system. [e]
  • Culture of Japan [r]: Set of traditions, pastimes, artistic expression, use of language, belief systems and so on that distinguishes Japan from other nations. [e]
  • Cyrillic alphabet [r]: The alphabet used for a number of languages, mostly Slavonic ones, including Russian, Bulgarian and Serbian. [e]
  • D (letter) [r]: The fourth letter of the English and Latin alphabets. [e]
  • Dutch language [r]: West-Germanic language spoken by roughly 20 million people in the Netherlands, Belgium, Suriname, and the Netherlands Antilles. [e]
  • E (letter) [r]: The fifth letter of the English and Latin alphabets. [e]
  • English alphabet [r]: A Latin-based alphabet consisting of 28 letters ie. 26 standard letters plus two print ligatures æ and œ. [e]
  • Esperanto [r]: International language created by Zamenhof in the late 19th century. [e]
  • F (letter) [r]: The sixth letter of the English alphabet. Its name is pronounced eff. [e]
  • Francoprovençal language [r]: Romance language spoken in central eastern France, western Switzerland and northwestern Italy. [e]
  • French language [r]: A Romance language spoken in northwestern Europe (mainly in France, Belgium, Switzerland), in Canada and in many other countries. [e]
  • G (letter) [r]: The seventh letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • GH [r]: A digraph (a two-letter grapheme) used with various different values in a number of languages using the Latin alphabet. [e]
  • Gamma (Greek letter) [r]: The third letter of the Greek alphabet, written \Gamma (upper-case) or \gamma (lower-case). [e]
  • German language [r]: German is a West-Germanic language, the official language of Germany, Austria and Liechtenstein, one of several official languages in Switzerland and Belgium, and also spoken in Italy and Denmark. [e]
  • Germanic languages [r]: Branch of the Indo-European language family, initially spoken in northern and central Europe and now spread in many parts of the World. [e]
  • Greek alphabet [r]: Set of twenty-four letters that has been used to write the Greek language since the late 9th or early 8th century BC. [e]
  • H (letter) [r]: The eighth letter in the basic modern Latin alphabet. [e]
  • HTML [r]: A set of tags for marking up the content of a web page into distinct sections. [e]
  • Hungarian language [r]: The official language of Hungary. [e]
  • I (letter) [r]: The ninth letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • International Phonetic Alphabet [r]: System of phonetic notation based on the Latin alphabet, devised by the International Phonetic Association as a standardized representation of the sounds of spoken language. [e]
  • Irish language [r]: A Goidelic Celtic language spoken mainly on the island of Ireland and in Canada. [e]
  • Italian language [r]: A Romance language spoken in Italy and Switzerland. [e]
  • J (letter) [r]: The tenth letter in the basic modern Latin alphabet, and historically the last of the 26 letters to be added. [e]
  • Japanese language [r]: (日本語 Nihongo), Japonic language spoken mostly in Japan; Japonic family's linguistic relationship to other tongues yet to be established, though Japanese may be related to Korean; written in a combination of Chinese-derived characters (漢字 kanji) and native hiragana (ひらがな) and katakana (カタカナ) scripts; about 125,000,000 native speakers worldwide. [e]
  • K (letter) [r]: The eleventh letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • L (letter) [r]: The twelfth letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet. [e]
  • Letter (alphabet) [r]: Symbol in an alphabetic script, usually denoting one or more phonemes; for example, in the English alphabet the letter <a> can represent the phoneme /æ/ as in mat and /eɪ/ as in mate. [e]
  • Linguistic prescriptivism [r]: The laying down or prescribing of normative rules for the use of a language, or the making of recommendations for effective language usage. [e]
  • M (letter) [r]: The thirteenth letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet. [e]
  • Middle English [r]: English language as it was from about the middle of the eleventh century until the end of the fifteenth century. [e]
  • Minimal pair [r]: Two words differing by only one unit of sound, or phoneme. [e]
  • N (letter) [r]: The fourteenth letter in the basic modern Latin alphabet. [e]
  • Norwegian language [r]: North Germanic language spoken primarily in Norway; 4.7 million speakers. [e]
  • Number [r]: One of the fundamental concepts of mathematics, used for such purposes as counting, ordering, and measuring. [e]
  • O (letter) [r]: The fifteenth letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet. [e]
  • Occitan language [r]: Romance language spoken in Occitania. [e]
  • Occitania [r]: Area of southwestern Europe were the Occitan language is spoken. [e]
  • Oceania [r]: A major geographical region of the planet Earth, mostly in the southern hemisphere, consisting of Australasia (the Australian continent and New Zealand), Micronesia, Melanesia and Polynesia. [e]
  • Orthography of Irish [r]: Add brief definition or description
  • P (letter) [r]: The sixteenth letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • Palatalization [r]: An umbrella term for several processes of assimilation in phonetics and phonology, by which the articulation of a consonant is changed under the influence of a preceding or following front vowel or a palatal or palatalized consonant. [e]
  • Portuguese language [r]: An Iberian Romance language, of the Indo-European family. [e]
  • Q (letter) [r]: The seventeenth letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • R (letter) [r]: The 18th letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • S (letter) [r]: The 19th letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • Schwa [r]: Mid-central neutral vowel, typically occurring in unstressed syllables and, in some systems of phonetic transcription, a stressed mid-central vowel. [e]
  • Serbian language [r]: Slavic language belonging to the Serbo-Croatian diasystem, spoken by Serbian people and Montenegrin people, mainly in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo. [e]
  • Slavic languages [r]: Branch of the Indo-European language family, spoken in eastern Europe and Siberia. [e]
  • Spanish language [r]: A Romance language widely spoken in Spain, its current and former territories, and the United States of America. [e]
  • T (letter) [r]: The 20th letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • Tajik alphabet [r]: Add brief definition or description
  • Turkish language [r]: Turkic language mainly spoken in Turkey and among Turkish-speaking populations in several countries. [e]
  • U (letter) [r]: The twenty-first letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • Unicode [r]: Character encoding standard designed to formalize a universal representation of alphanumeric symbols. [e]
  • V (letter) [r]: The twenty-second letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • Volga Tatar language [r]: Turkic language mainly spoken in Tatarstan by Volga Tatar people. [e]
  • W (letter) [r]: The twenty-third letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • Writing [r]: The process of recording thoughts or speech in a visually or haptically retrievable manner. [e]
  • Written language [r]: The communication and representation of a language by means of a writing system. [e]
  • X (letter) [r]: The twenty-fourth letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • Y (letter) [r]: The twenty-fifth and penultimate letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • Z (letter) [r]: The twenty-sixth and last letter of the English alphabet. [e]
  • Ð, ð (eth) [r]: (lowercase: ð) Letter called "eth", used in some variants of the Latin alphabet, especially in Icelandic, Faeroese, Old and Middle English. [e]
  • Þ [r]: Letter of the Runic alphabet, called "thorn", also used in some variants of the Latin alphabet (Icelandic, Old and Middle English). [e]
  • Đ, đ (D with stroke) [r]: (lowercase: đ) Letter used in some variants of the Latin alphabet, especially in Vietnamese, Serbian, Croatian and Bosnian. [e]
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