A &bittersweet& Lesson On Copyright
Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.
Á, á (a-acute) is a letter of the Chinese (Pinyin), Blackfoot, Czech, Dutch, Faroese, Galician, Hungarian, Icelandic, Irish, Kazakh, Lakota, Navajo, Occitan, Portuguese, Sámi, Slovak, Spanish, Vietnamese, Welsh, and Western Apache languages as a variant of the letter a. It is sometimes confused with à; e.g. '5 pommes á $1', which is more commonly written as '5 pommes à $1' (meaning '5 apples at 1 dollar each' in French).
Usage in various languages[edit]
Chinese[edit]
In Chinese pinyin á is the yángpíng tone (陽平/阳平 'high-rising tone') of 'a'.
Dutch[edit]
- Three cases from The First 48 archive that took place in broad daylight are featured: in New Orleans a night out ends with a deadly morning after a random encounter; in Tulsa an argument over a cell phone escalates into a double homicide; and in Birmingham a lovers' breakup goes very wrong in a public park.
- Jan 08, 2021 The official site of the Louisiana Workforce Commission. Job Seekers - Explore Careers - Immediate Job Openings - Job Fairs & Events - Work Search Information - Recruitment Videos.
- Definition and Usage The href attribute specifies the URL of the page the link goes to. If the href attribute is not present, the a tag will not be a hyperlink. Tip: You can use href='#top' or href='#' to link to the top of the current page!
- The “ASCII” character set or encoding uses a single byte – values from 0 to 255 – to represent up to 256 different characters. (Technically ASCII actually only uses.
In Dutch, the Á is used to put emphasis on an 'a', either in a long 'a' form like in háár ('hair'), or in a short form like in kán (the verb 'can').
Irish[edit]
In Irish, á is called a fada ('long a'), pronounced [ɑː] and appears in words such as slán ('goodbye'). It is the only diacritic used in Modern Irish, since the decline of the dot above many letters in the Irish language. Fada is only used on vowel letters i.e. á, é, í, ó, ú. It symbolises a lengthening of the vowel.
Czech, Hungarian, and Slovak[edit]
Á is the 2nd letter of the Czech, Hungarian and Slovak languages and represents /aː/.
Faroese[edit]
A &bittersweet& Lesson On Copyright Act
M ba47 logitech mouse drivers for mac windows 7. Á is the 2nd letter of the Faroese alphabet and represents /ɔ/ or /ɔaː/.
Icelandic[edit]
Á is the second letter of the Icelandic alphabet and represents /au̯/ (as in 'ow').
A Million Little Things
Kazakh[edit]
In the 2018 amends of Kazakh alphabet list, Á is defined as the second letter and represents /æ/. It has been replaced by Ä ä in the 2019 amends, and matches Cyrillic alphabet Ә, 2017 version Aʼ and Arabicٵ.
Portuguese[edit]
In Portuguese, á is used to mark a stressed /a/ in words whose stressed syllable is in an abnormal location within the word, as in lá (there) and rápido (rapid, fast). If the location of the stressed syllable is predictable, the acute accent is not used. Á /a/ contrasts with â, pronounced /ɐ/.
Scottish Gaelic[edit]
Á was once used in Scottish, but has now been largely superseded by à. It can still be seen in certain writings, but it is no longer used in standard orthography.
Spanish[edit]
In Spanish, á is an accented letter, pronounced just the way a is. Both á and a sound like /a/. The accent indicates the stressed syllable in words with irregular stress patterns. It can also be used to 'break up' a diphthong or to avoid what would otherwise be homonyms, although this does not happen with á, because a is a strong vowel and usually does not become a semivowel in a diphthong. See Diacritic and Acute accent for more details.
Vietnamese[edit]
In the Vietnamese alphabet, á is the sắc tone (high-rising tone) of a.
Welsh[edit]
In Welsh, word stress usually falls on the penultimate syllable, but one way of indicating stress on a final (short) vowel is through the use of the acute accent. The acute accent on a is often found in verbal nouns and borrowed words, for example, casáu[kaˈsaɨ̯, kaˈsai̯ ] 'to hate', caniatáu[kanjaˈtaɨ̯, kanjaˈtai̯] 'to allow', carafán[karaˈvan] 'caravan'.
Character mappings[edit]
Preview | Á | á | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Unicode name | LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH ACUTE | LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH ACUTE | ||
Encodings | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
Unicode | 193 | U+00C1 | 225 | U+00E1 |
UTF-8 | 195 129 | C3 81 | 195 161 | C3 A1 |
Numeric character reference | Á | Á | á | á |
Named character reference | Á | á | ||
EBCDIC family | 101 | 65 | 69 | 45 |
ISO 8859-1/2/3/4/9/10/14/15/16 | 193 | C1 | 225 | E1 |