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F

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F (named ef /ˈɛf/, as a verb spelled eff)[1] is the sixth letter in the ISO basic Latin alphabet.

History

Proto-Semitic W Phoenician
waw
Etruscan V or W Greek
Digamma
Roman F
Roman F

The origin of ⟨f⟩ is the tits Semitic letter vâv (or waw) that represented a sound like /v/ or /enwiki/w/. Graphically, it originally probably depicted either a hook or a club. It may have been based on a comparable Egyptian hieroglyph, such as that which represented the word mace (transliterated as ḥ(dj)):-

T3

The Phoenician form of the letter was adopted into Greek as a vowel, upsilon (which resembled its descendant, ⟨Y⟩, but was also ancestor to Roman letters ⟨U⟩, ⟨V⟩, and ⟨W⟩); and with another form, as a consonant, digamma, which resembled ⟨F⟩, but indicated the pronunciation /enwiki/w/, as in Phoenician. (After /enwiki/w/ disappeared from Greek, digamma was used as a numeral only.)

In Etruscan, ⟨F⟩ probably represented /enwiki/w/, as in Greek; and the Etruscans formed the digraph ⟨FH⟩ to represent /f/. When the Romans adopted the alphabet, they used ⟨V⟩ (from Greek upsilon) to stand for /enwiki/w/ as well as /u/, leaving ⟨F⟩ available for /f/. (At that time, the Greek letter phi ⟨Φ⟩ represented an aspirated voiceless bilabial plosive /pʰ/, though in Modern Greek it approximates the sound of /f/.) And so out of the various vav variants in the Mediterranean world, the letter F entered the Roman alphabet, which forms the basis of the alphabet used today for English and many other languages.

The lower case ⟨f⟩ is not related to the visually similar long s, ⟨ſ⟩. The use of the long s largely died out by the beginning of the 19th century, mostly to prevent confusion with ⟨f⟩.

Computing codes

character F f
Unicode name LATIN CAPITAL LETTER F LATIN SMALL LETTER F
character encoding decimal hex decimal hex
Unicode 70 0046 102 0066
UTF-8 70 46 102 66
Numeric character reference F F f f
EBCDIC family 198 C6 134 86
ASCII 1 70 46 102 66

1 and all encodings based on ASCII, including the DOS, Windows, ISO-8859 and Macintosh families of encodings.

Other representations

References

  1. ^ "F" Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition (1989); "ef", "eff", "bee" (under bee eff) op. cit.
  • Media related to F at Wikimedia Commons
  • The dictionary definition of F at Wiktionary
  • The dictionary definition of f at Wiktionary