Basic Latin alphabet | |||||
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Aa | Bb | Cc | Dd | ||
Ee | Ff | Gg | Hh | ||
Ii | Jj | Kk | Ll | Mm | Nn |
Oo | Pp | Rr | Ss | Tt | |
Uu | Vv | Ww | Xx | Yy | Zz |
B ( /ˈbiː/; named bee)[1] is the second letter in the basic modern Latin alphabet. It is used to represent a variety of bilabial sounds (depending on language), most commonly a voiced bilabial plosive.
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⟨B⟩ may have started as a pictogram of the floorplan of a house in Egyptian hieroglyphs. By 1050 BC, the Phoenician alphabet's letter had a linear form that served as the beth.
Egyptian hieroglyph cottage |
Phoenician beth |
Greek Beta |
Etruscan B |
Roman B |
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The modern lowercase ⟨b⟩ derives from later Roman times, when scribes began omitting the upper loop of the capital.
Blackletter B | Uncial B | |
Modern Roman B | Modern Italic B | Modern Script B |
In English and most other languages that use the Latin alphabet, ⟨b⟩ denotes the voiced bilabial plosive /b/, as in bib. In English it is sometimes silent; most instances are derived from old monosyllablic words with the b final and immediately preceded by an m, such as lamb and bomb; a few are examples of etymological spelling to make the word more like its Latin original, such as debt or doubt. In Estonian, Icelandic, and in Chinese, ⟨b⟩ does not denote a voiced consonant; instead, it represents a voiceless /p/ that contrasts with either a geminated /pp/ (in Estonian) or an aspirated /pʰ/ (in Chinese, Danish and Icelandic), represented by ⟨p⟩. In Fijian ⟨b⟩ represents a prenasalized /mb/, whereas in Zulu and Xhosa it represents an implosive /ɓ/, in contrast to the digraph ⟨bh⟩ which represents /b/.
Finnish only uses ⟨b⟩ in loanwords.
In the International Phonetic Alphabet and X-SAMPA, ⟨b⟩ denotes the voiced bilabial plosive. Variants of ⟨b⟩ denote related bilabial consonants, like the voiced bilabial implosive and the bilabial trill. In X-SAMPA, capital ⟨B⟩ denotes the voiced bilabial fricative.
⟨B⟩ is also a musical note. Its value varies depending on the region; a ⟨b⟩ in Anglophone countries represents a note that is a semitone higher than the B note in Northern Continental Europe. (Anglophone B is represented in Northern Europe with ⟨H⟩.) Archaic forms of ⟨b⟩, the b quadratum (square b, ♮) and b rotundum (round b, ♭) remain in use for musical notation as the symbols for natural and flat, respectively.
In Contracted (grade 2) English braille, ⟨b⟩ stands for "but" when in isolation.
character | B | b | ||
Unicode name | LATIN CAPITAL LETTER B | LATIN SMALL LETTER B | ||
character encoding | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
Unicode | 66 | 0042 | 98 | 0062 |
UTF-8 | 66 | 42 | 98 | 62 |
Numeric character reference | B | B | b | b |
EBCDIC family | 194 | C2 | 130 | 82 |
ASCII 1 | 66 | 42 | 98 | 62 |
1 and all encodings based on ASCII, including the DOS, Windows, ISO-8859 and Macintosh families of encodings.
Aa | Bb | Cc | Dd | Ee | Ff | Gg | Hh | Ii | Jj | Kk | Ll | Mm | Nn | Oo | Pp | Rr | Ss | Tt | Uu | Vv | Ww | Xx | Yy | Zz | ||
Letter B with diacritics
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Ḃḃ | Ḅḅ | Ḇḇ | Ƀƀ | Ɓɓ | Ƃƃ | ᵬ | ᶀ | |||||||||||||||||||
Related
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