Dot (diacritic)


When used as a diacritic mark, the term dot primarily refers to the glyphs "combining dot above" , and "combining dot below"
which may be combined with some letters of the extended Latin alphabets in use in
a variety of languages. Similar marks are used with other scripts.

Overdot

Language scripts or transcription schemes that use the dot above a letter as a diacritical mark:
In mathematics and physics, when using Newton's notation the dot denotes the time derivative as in. In addition, the overdot is one way used to indicate an infinitely repeating set of numbers in decimal notation, as in, which is equal to the fraction, and or, which is equal to [142857 (number)|].

Underdot

Raised dot and middle dot

In Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics, in addition to the middle dot as a letter, centred dot diacritic, and dot above diacritic, there also is a two-dot diacritic in the Naskapi language representing /_w_V/ which depending on the placement on the specific Syllabic letter may resemble a colon when placed vertically, diaeresis when placed horizontally, or a combination of middle dot and dot above diacritic when placed either at an angle or enveloping a small raised letter. Additionally, in Northwestern Ojibwe, a small raised /wi/ as /w/, the middle dot is raised farther up as either or ; there also is a raised dot "Final", which represents /w/ in some Cree language|Swampy Cree] and /y/ in some Northwestern Ojibwe.

Side dot

The diacritics and , known as Bangjeom, were used to mark pitch accents in Hangul for Middle Korean. They were written to the left of a syllable in vertical writing and above a syllable in horizontal writing.

Dot above right

In the Pe̍h-ōe-jī orthography of Hokkien, a dot above right is used in the letter to represent the vowel /ɔ/.

Letters with dot



Encoding

In Unicode, the dot is encoded as a combining diacritic at:
and at:
There is also:
The many precomposed characters can be found at the Unicode Consortium website.