Low Line
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The low line (also known as underline or underscore) originates from underlining used for emphasis.[1] Note that this diacritic can easily be confused with macron below. The difference is that the low line is longer, and should result in a single long line when used on several consecutive characters, while characters with macron below should have small gaps between the macrons.[2] There are no precomposed characters with low line.
Low Line in Unicode
_ | ◌̲ |
U+005F | U+0332 |
Low Line | Combining Low Line |
Note: This is the underscore used in e.g. URLs. |
Low Line in Natlangs
Usage | Language | Letters | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Dental consonant | Moro | D̲d̲ /d̪/, T̲t̲ /t̪/ | In the literature there appears a letter D̶d̶ which is not mentioned in the text. This probably stands for the same sound as D̲d̲, but the reason for why it is variously written with D̲d̲ and D̶d̶ is not explained.[3][4] The orthography for Moro did not have capital letters originally.[3] |
Disambiguation in transliteration | Amharic (BGN/PCGN 1967 transliteration) | T̲s̲’̲ t̲s̲’̲ /tsʼ/ | The Geʽez script has two types of characters that are pronounced /tsʼ/ in Amharic due to sounds mergers. These may be transliterated with Tsʼ tsʼ and T̲s̲’̲ t̲s̲’̲. The diacritic may also be dropped though.[5] It is unclear which diacritic, if any, is really supposed to be used. The aforementioned source uses underlining. |
Low Line in Conlangs
Usage | Language | Creator | Letters | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
See Also
References
- ↑ Underline at Wikipedia.
- ↑ Macron below at Wikipedia.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Guest, Elizabeth. 1997. Moro Phonology.
- ↑ Blench, Roger. 2005. A dictionary of the Moro language of the Nuba hills, Sudan.
- ↑ Romanization of Amharic (PDF).