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・ Letta
・ Letta Cabinet
・ Letta Mbulu
・ Lettau Bluff
・ Lettau Peak
・ Lettauia
・ Lette
・ Lette (Kr Coesfeld) station
・ Lette railway line
・ Lette Valeska
・ Letteguives
・ Letten Tunnel
・ Lettenkeuper Formation
・ Lettenkohle Formation
・ Letter
Letter (alphabet)
・ Letter (message)
・ Letter (paper size)
・ Letter 1949
・ Letter 2 My Unborn
・ Letter and spirit of the law
・ Letter Arts Review
・ Letter at Dawn
・ Letter B
・ Letter bank
・ Letter beacon
・ Letter board
・ Letter bomb
・ Letter box
・ Letter Box (TV series)


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Letter (alphabet) : ウィキペディア英語版
Letter (alphabet)

A letter is a grapheme (written character) in an alphabetic system of writing, such as the Greek alphabet and its descendants. Letters also appear in abjads and abugidas (variants of alphabets in which vowel marking is secondary or absent). Letters broadly denote phonemes in the spoken form of the language, although there is rarely a consistent exact correspondence between letters and phonemes.
Written signs in other writing systems are best called syllabograms (which denote a syllable) or logograms (which denote a word or phrase).
==Definition and usage==

"Letter," borrowed from Old French ''lettre'', entered Middle English around AD 1200, eventually displacing the native English term ''bocstaf'' (i.e. bookstaff). ''Letter'' derives from Latin ''littera'', which may have derived, via Etruscan, from the Greek "διφθέρα" (writing tablet).〔http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=letter&allowed_in_frame=0〕 The Middle English plural ''lettres'' could refer to an epistle or written document, reflecting the use of the Latin plural ''litteræ''. Use of the singular ''letter'' to refer to a written document emerged in the 14th century.
As symbols that denote segmental speech, letters are associated with phonetics. In a purely phonemic alphabet, a single phoneme is denoted by a single letter, but in history and practice letters often denote more than one phoneme. A pair of letters designating a single phoneme is called a digraph. Examples of digraphs in English include "ch", "sh" and "th". A phoneme can also be represented by three letters, called a trigraph. An example is the combination "sch" in German.
A letter may also be associated with more than one phoneme, with the phoneme depending on the surrounding letters or etymology of the word. As an example of positional effects, the Spanish letter c is pronounced () before ''a'', ''o'', or ''u'' (e.g. ''cantar'', ''corto'', ''cuidado''), but is pronounced () before ''e'' or ''i'' (e.g. ''centimo'', ''ciudad'').
Letters also have specific names associated with them. These names may differ with language, dialect and history. Z, for example, is usually called ''zed'' in all English-speaking countries except the U.S., where it is named ''zee''.
Letters, as elements of alphabets, have prescribed orders. This may generally be known as "alphabetical order" though collation is the science devoted to the complex task of ordering and sorting of letters and words in different languages. In Spanish, for instance, ñ is a separate letter being sorted after n. In English, n and ñ are sorted alike.
Letters may also have numerical value. This is true of Roman numerals and the letters of other writing systems. In English, Arabic numerals are typically used instead of letters.
Letters may be used as words. The words ''a'' (lower or uppercase) and ''I'' (always uppercase) are the most common English letter-words. Sometimes ''O'' is used for "Oh" in poetic situations. In extremely informal cases of writing (such as SMS language) individual letters may replace words, e.g. ''u'' may be used instead of "you" in English, when the letter name is pronounced as a homophone of the word.
People and objects are sometimes named after letters, for one of these reasons:
# The letter is an abbreviation, e.g. "G-man" as slang for a Federal Bureau of Investigation agent, arose as short for "Government Man".
# Alphabetical order used as a counting system, e.g. Plan A, Plan B, etc.; alpha ray, beta ray, gamma ray, delta ray, epsilon ray
# The shape of the letter, e.g. D-ring, F-clamp, G-clamp, H-block, H engine, O-ring, R-clip, U engine, V engine, Z-drive, a river delta
# Other reasons, e.g. X-ray after "''x'' the unknown" in algebra, because the discoverer did not know what they were.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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