Greek alphabet | |||
---|---|---|---|
Αα | Alpha | Νν | Nu |
Ββ | Beta | Ξξ | Xi |
Γγ | Gamma | Οο | Omicron |
Δδ | Delta | Ππ | Pi |
Εε | Epsilon | Ρρ | Rho |
Ζζ | Zeta | Σσς | Sigma |
Ηη | Eta | Ττ | Tau |
Θθ | Theta | Υυ | Upsilon |
Ιι | Iota | Φφ | Phi |
Κκ | Kappa | Χχ | Chi |
Λλ | Lambda | Ψψ | Psi |
Μμ | Mu | Ωω | Omega |
Other characters | |||
Digamma | Stigma | ||
Heta | San | ||
Qoppa | Sampi | ||
Greek diacritics |
Epsilon (uppercase Ε, lowercase ε; Greek: Έψιλον) is the fifth letter of the Greek alphabet, corresponding phonetically to a close-mid front unrounded vowel /e/. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 5. It was derived from the Phoenician letter He . Letters that arose from Epsilon include the Roman E and Cyrillic Ye.
The name "epsilon" (ἒ ψιλόν, "simple e") was coined in the Middle Ages to distinguish the letter from the digraph αι, a former diphthong that had come to be pronounced the same as epsilon.
The uppercase form of epsilon looks essentially identical to Latin E. The lowercase version has two typographical variants, both inherited from medieval Greek handwriting. One, the most common in modern typography and inherited from medieval minuscule, looks like an inverted "3". The other, also known as lunate or uncial epsilon and inherited from earlier uncial writing,[1][2] looks like a semicircle crossed by a horizontal bar. While in normal typography these are just alternate font variants, both may have different meanings as mathematical symbols. Computer systems therefore offer distinct encodings for both.[1] In Unicode, the character U+03F5 "Greek lunate epsilon symbol" (ϵ) is provided specifically for the lunate form. In TeX, \epsilon
( ) denotes the lunar form, while \varepsilon
() denotes the inverted-3 form.
There is also a Latin epsilon or "open e", which looks similar to the Greek lowercase epsilon. It is encoded in Unicode as U+025B ("Latin small letter open e", ɛ) and U+0190 ("Latin capital letter open e", Ɛ) and is used as an IPA phonetic symbol. The lunate or uncial epsilon has also provided inspiration for the euro sign (€).
The lunate epsilon (ϵ) is not to be confused with the set membership symbol (∈), nor should the Latin uppercase epsilon (Ɛ) be confused with the Greek uppercase sigma (Σ).
The uppercase Epsilon is not commonly used outside of the Greek language because of its similarity to the Latin letter E.
The Greek lowercase epsilon ε, the lunate epsilon symbol ϵ, or the Latin lowercase epsilon ɛ (see above) is used as the symbol for:
Unicode | Sample | Description | Notes on usage |
---|---|---|---|
U+0395 | Ε | Greek capital letter epsilon | Greek alphabet: close-mid front unrounded vowel /e/; uppercase for U+03B5 |
U+03B5 | ε | Greek small letter epsilon | lowercase for U+0395 |
U+03F5 | ϵ | Greek lunate epsilon symbol | mathematics |
U+03F6 | ϶ | Greek reversed lunate epsilon symbol | mathematics |
U+0045 | E | Latin capital letter e | Latin alphabet; uppercase for U+0065 |
U+0065 | e | Latin small letter e | IPA: close-mid front unrounded vowel; lowercase for U+0045 |
U+018E | Ǝ | Latin capital letter reversed e | Pan-Nigerian alphabet; African reference alphabet; uppercase for U+01DD |
U+018F | Ə | Latin capital letter schwa | Latin Azerbaijani and Chechen alphabets: near-open front unrounded vowel /æ/; Uniform Turkic Alphabet; uppercase for U+0259 |
U+0190 | Ɛ | Latin capital letter open e | Niger-Congo languages; African reference alphabet; uppercase for U+025B |
U+01DD | ǝ | Latin small letter turned e | lowercase for U+018E |
U+0258 | ɘ | Latin small letter reversed e | IPA: close-mid central unrounded vowel |
U+0259 | ə | Latin small letter schwa | IPA: mid central vowel; lowercase for U+018F |
U+025B | ɛ | Latin small letter open e | IPA: open-mid front unrounded vowel; lowercase for U+0190 |
U+025C | ɜ | Latin small letter reversed open e | IPA: open-mid central unrounded vowel |
U+0404 | Є | Cyrillic capital letter Ukrainian ye | Ukrainian and Rusyn languages: /je/, or the iotated vowel sound /e/ after a palatalized consonant; uppercase for U+0454 |
U+0415 | Е | Cyrillic capital letter ye | Belarusian and Russian languages: a palatalizing vowel; Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbian, and Ukrainian languages: close-mid front unrounded vowel /e/ or open-mid front unrounded vowel /ɛ/; uppercase for U+0435 |
U+042D | Э | Cyrillic capital letter e | Belarusian and Russian languages: close-mid front unrounded vowel /e/ or open-mid front unrounded vowel /ɛ/; uppercase for U+044D |
U+0435 | е | Cyrillic small letter ye | lowercase for U+0415 |
U+044D | э | Cyrillic small letter e | lowercase for U+042D |
U+0454 | є | Cyrillic small letter Ukrainian ye | lowercase for U+0404 |
U+04D8 | Ә | Cyrillic capital letter schwa | Bashkir, Kalmyk, Kazakh and Tatar (and formerly Azeri) languages: near-open front unrounded vowel /æ/; Dungan language: close-mid back unrounded vowel /ɤ/; Kurdish language: mid central vowel /ə/; Abkhaz language: labialization of the preceding consonant /ʷ/; uppercase for U+04D9 |
U+04D9 | ә | Cyrillic small letter schwa | lowercase for U+04D8 |
U+20AC | € | euro sign | currency designator |
U+212E | ℮ | estimated sign | prepackaged goods within the EU |
U+2203 | ∃ | there exists | mathematics |
U+2208 | ∈ | element of | mathematics |
U+2209 | ∉ | not an element of | mathematics |
U+220A | ∊ | small element of | mathematics |
U+220B | ∋ | contains as member | mathematics |
U+220C | ∌ | does not contain as member | mathematics |
U+220D | ∍ | small contains as member | mathematics |
Epsilon as initial in Lectionary 226, on folio 20 verso |
Epsilon as initial in Lectionary 226, on folio 64 verso |
Lectionary 226, folio 125 verso, initial for epsilon |