G is the seventh letter in the Latin alphabet. Its name in English is spelled gee or occasionally ge (IPA /dʒiː/).[1]
History
The letter G was introduced in the Old Latin period as a variant
of C to distinguish Latin voiced velar /ɡ/ from voiceless /k/.
The recorded originator of the letter G is freedman Spurius Carvilius Ruga,
the first Roman to open a fee-paying school, who taught around 230 BC. At this time, K had fallen out
of favour, and C, which had formerly expressed both /ɡ/ and /k/ before open vowels, had come to express /k/ in all environments.
Ruga's positioning of G shows that alphabetic order, related to the letters' values as Greek
numerals, was a concern even in the 3rd century BC. Sampson (1985) suggested that: "Evidently the order of the alphabet
was felt to be such a concrete thing that a new letter could be added in the middle only if a ‘space’ was created by the dropping
of an old letter."[2] According to some records, the
original seventh letter, Z, had been purged from the Latin alphabet somewhat earlier in the 3rd century BC by the
Roman censor Appius Claudius, who found it
distasteful and foreign.[3]
Eventually, both velar consonants /k/ and /ɡ/ developed palatalizations and
allophones before front vowels, which is why today, C and G have different sound values in the
various 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. 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 represents a voiced postalveolar affricate
/dʒ/) ("soft G"), as in: giant, ginger, and geology; or a voiced velar plosive /ɡ/ ("hard G"), as in: goose, gargoyle, and game. In some words of
French origin, the "soft G" is pronounced as a fricative (/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 soft or hard regardless of position (e.g. "get"), and two (gaol,
margarine) in which it is soft even before an A.
Most non-Romance languages use G to represent /ɡ/ regardless of position
(however the Dutch language does not have /ɡ/ in its native words, and instead G is pronounced as a voiced velar
fricative /ɣ/ (a sound that does not occur in modern English). While
the soft value of G varies in different Romance languages (/ʒ/ in French,
Catalan, and Portuguese, /ʤ/ in Italian and Romanian, and /x/ in Castilian Spanish and /h/
in other dialects of Spanish), in all except Romanian and Italian, 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 /ɡ/, /ɣ/, /x/, and /j/. It now has a great variety of values, including /f/ in
enough, /ɡ/ in loan words like spaghetti, and as an indicator
of a letter's "long" pronunciation in words like eight and night. GN, with value /n/, is also common, as in sign.
In Italian and Romanian, GH is used to represent a /ɡ/ value before
front vowels where G would otherwise represent a soft value. In Italian and French, GN is used to represent the palatal nasal /ɲ/, a sound similar to the NY in
canyon).
G is used an average amount in the English language. While not one of the letters that appears rarely it is also not one of
the most commonly used consonants.
Codes for computing
Alternative representations of G
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.
References
- ^ "G" Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition (1989);
Merriam-Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged (1993); "gee," op. cit.
- ^ Evertype.com
- ^ Encyclopaedia Romana
External links
See also
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