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G

Webpages concerning "G"

Edmonton's 23rd Annual Celebration of Documentary Cinema, Global Awareness and Community Engagement, sharing visions, exposing abuses, encouraging dignity, inspiring solidarity fostering mutual understanding, celebrating diversity
http://www.globalvisionsfestival.com/

http://www.globalvisionsfestival.com/

Deutsches Kinder-Film & Fernseh-Festival. Kinder-Film & Fernseh-Tage. Stiftung GOLDENER SPATZ
http://www.goldenerspatz.de/
Keywords:
Festival, Kinderfilm, Kinderfernsehen, Film, Fernsehen, Tagung, Stiftung, awards, Preisverleihung, Gera, Kultur, Kunst, Goldener Spatz, Stiftung

http://www.goldenerspatz.de/

http://www.gaffers.org

http://www.gaffers.org

http://www.greatlakesfilmfest.com/

http://www.greatlakesfilmfest.com/

http://www.greenwichfilmfestival.org/

http://www.greenwichfilmfestival.org/

http://www.gulfcoastfilmfest.com

http://www.gulfcoastfilmfest.com

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Wikipedia-Article "G"

G
Latin alphabet
Aa Bb Cc Dd
Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj
Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo Pp
Qq Rr Ss Tt Uu Vv
Ww Xx Yy Zz

G is the seventh letter in the Roman alphabet. Its name in English is gee.

Contents

History

The letter G was created by the Romans because they felt that C was not an adequate letter to represent both /k/ and /g/.

Hebrew "gimel"
Hebrew gimel
Phoenician "gimel"
Phoenician gimel
Classical Greek
Classical Greek gamma
Early Latin
Early Latin
Late Latin
Late Latin

The alleged inventor is a known historical figure, Spurius Carvilius Ruga (who flourished around 230 BC). G, which at this time took the place in the alphabet formerly held by Z, came to represent the sound /g/. As the sound /k/ did, /g/ also developed palatal and velar allophones which is why today, G has different sound values in all Romance languages, as well as English (due to French influence).

The modern minuscule (lower-case) G has two basic shapes: the "opentail G" and the "looptail G" . The opentail version derives from the majuscule (capital) form by raising the serif that distinguishes it from a C to the top of the loop, thereby closing the loop, and extending the vertical stroke downward and to the left. The looptail form developed similarly, except that some ornate forms then extended the tail back to the right, and to the left again, forming a loop. The initial extension to the left was absorbed into the upper loop. The looptail version became popular when printing switched to "Roman type" because the tail was effectively shorter, making it possible to put more lines on a page. And in the looptail version, there is a tiny flick at the upper right which in typography is called its "ear."

Generally, the two minuscule forms are interchangeable, but occasionally the difference has been exploited to make a contrast. The 1949 Principles of the International Phonetic Association recommends using for advanced voiced velar plosives and for regular ones where the two are contrasted, but this suggestion was never accepted by phoneticians in general, and today is the symbol used in the International Phonetic Alphabet, with acknowledged as an acceptable variant.

Usage

In English, the letter can be pronounced as a "soft G" (IPA /dʒ/), as in: giant, ginger, geology, or as a "hard G" (IPA /g/), as in: goose, gargoyle, game. In some words of French origin, as in French generally, the "soft G" is pronounced as IPA /ʒ/, as in rouge, beige, and genre. Generally, G is soft before E, I, and Y, and hard otherwise, but there are many English words of non-Romance origin where G is hard regardless of position, and two (gaol and margarine) in which it is soft even before an A.

Most non-Romance languages pronounce G as /g/ regardless of position (however the Dutch language does not have a /g/ sound in its native words, and instead G is pronounced /ɣ/, a sound that does not occur in English) while in Romance languages the soft value varies, such as /ʒ/ in French, Catalan, and Portuguese, /ʤ/ in Italian, and /x/ in Spanish. The general rule is that soft G is pronounced the same as the J of the same language.

Several digraphs are common in English. GH originally represented the letter yogh which English adopted from Old Irish, and took various values including /g/, /ɣ/, /x/, and /j/. It now has a great variety of values, including /f/ in enough, /g/ in loan words like spaghetti, and silence in words like eight and night. GN, with value /n/, is also common, as in sign.

In Italian, GH is used to force a /g/ value before E and I where G would take a soft value, and GN is used for /ɲ/ (rather like English NY in canyon).

In Spanish, G before I or E is pronounced as the same as J. The Spanish poet Juan Ramón Jiménez proposed to simplify the Spanish spelling by using just the versions with j. The rest of Spanish speakers did not follow him, but his works, and the translations of Rabindranath Tagore made by Jiménez's wife Zenobia Camprubí, are published in his spelling.

Alternative representations

Golf represents the letter G in the NATO phonetic alphabet.

In international Morse code the letter G is DahDahDit: - - ·

In Braille the letter G is represented as (in Unicode), the dot pattern,

XX
XX
..

Computing

In Unicode the capital G is codepoint U+0047 and the lowercase g is U+0067.

The ASCII code for capital G is 71 and for lowercase g is 103; or in binary 01000111 and 01100111, correspondingly.

The EBCDIC code for capital G is 199 and for lowercase g is 135.

The numeric character references in HTML and XML are "G" and "g" for upper and lower case respectively.

Meanings for G

See also


Two-letter combinations
Ga Gb Gc Gd Ge Gf Gg Gh Gi Gj Gk Gl Gm Gn Go Gp Gq Gr Gs Gt Gu Gv Gw Gx Gy Gz
GA GB GC GD GE GF GG GH GI GJ GK GL GM GN GO GP GQ GR GS GT GU GV GW GX GY GZ
Letter-digit & Digit-letter combinations
G0 G1 G2 G3 G4 G5 G6 G7 G8 G9
0G 1G 2G 3G 4G 5G 6G 7G 8G 9G
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