T, or t, is the twentieth letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. Its name in English is tee (pronounced ), plural tees.
It is derived from the Semitic Taw ð¤ of the Phoenician and Paleo-Hebrew script (Aramaic and Hebrew Taw ê/ð¡Â/, Syriac Taw ì, and Arabic ê TÃÂü) via the Greek letter à(tau). In English, it is most commonly used to represent the voiceless alveolar plosive, a sound it also denotes in the International Phonetic Alphabet. It is the most commonly used consonant and the second-most commonly used letter in English-language texts.
Taw was the last letter of the Western Semitic and Hebrew alphabets. The sound value of Semitic Taw, the Greek alphabet Tñà(Tau), Old Italic and Latin T has remained fairly constant, representing in each of these, and it has also kept its original basic shape in most of these alphabets.
In English, usually denotes the voiceless alveolar plosive (: ), as in tart, tee, or ties, often with aspiration at the beginnings of words or before stressed vowels. The letter corresponds to the affricate in some words as a result of yod-coalescence (for example, in words ending in -"ture", such as future).
A common digraph is , which usually represents a dental fricative, but occasionally represents (as in Thomas and thyme). The digraph often corresponds to the sound (a voiceless palato-alveolar sibilant) word-medially when followed by a vowel, as in nation, ratio, negotiation, and Croatia.
In a few words of modern French origin, the letter T is silent at the end of a word; these include croquet and debut.
In the orthographies of other languages, is often used for , the voiceless dental plosive , or similar sounds.
In the International Phonetic Alphabet, denotes the voiceless alveolar plosive.
Unicode:
Codepoints 0054<sub>16</sub> (84<sub>10</sub>) and x0074<sub>16</sub> (116<sub>10</sub>) were used for encodings based on ASCII, including the DOS, Windows, ISO-8859 and Macintosh families of encodings.
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