![]() ![]() Glyph for U+1D76E Mathematical Sans-Serif Bold Capital Omega.Glyph for U+1D734 Mathematical Bold Italic Capital Omega.Glyph for U+1D6FA Mathematical Italic Capital Omega.Glyph for U+1D6C0 Mathematical Bold Capital Omega.Glyph for U+1FFC Greek Capital Letter Omega with Prosgegrammeni.Glyph for U+1FFA Greek Capital Letter Omega with Varia.Glyph for U+1FF7 Greek Small Letter Omega with Perispomeni and Ypogegrammeni.Glyph for U+1FF6 Greek Small Letter Omega with Perispomeni.Glyph for U+1FF3 Greek Small Letter Omega with Ypogegrammeni.Glyph for U+1F69 Greek Capital Letter Omega with Dasia.Glyph for U+1F68 Greek Capital Letter Omega with Psili.Glyph for U+03C9 Greek Small Letter Omega.Glyph for U+038F Greek Capital Letter Omega with Tonos.The letter omega is transliterated into a Latin-script alphabet as ō or simply o.Īs the final letter in the Greek alphabet, omega is often used to denote the last, the end, or the ultimate limit of a set, in contrast to alpha, the first letter of the Greek alphabet see Alpha and Omega. In Modern Greek, both omega and omicron represent the mid back rounded vowel IPA: or IPA: . In phonetic terms, the Ancient Greek Ω represented a long open-mid back rounded vowel IPA: , comparable to the "aw" of the English word raw in dialects without the cot–caught merger, in contrast to omicron which represented the close-mid back rounded vowel IPA: , and the digraph ου which represented the long close-mid back rounded vowel IPA: . The word literally means "great O" ( ō mega, mega meaning "great"), as opposed to omicron, which means "little O" ( o mikron, micron meaning "little"). In the Greek numeric system/isopsephy (gematria), it has a value of 800. ![]() Omega ( capital: Ω, lowercase: ω Ancient Greek ὦ, later ὦ μέγα, Modern Greek ωμέγα) is the twenty-fourth and final letter in the Greek alphabet. The Wikipedia has the following information about this codepoint: It has type Upper for sentence and Alphabetic Letter for word breaks. In text U+03A9 behaves as Alphabetic regarding line breaks. The glyph can, under circumstances, be confused with 9 other glyphs. In bidirectional context it acts as Left To Right and is not mirrored. It is related to its lowercase variant Glyph for U+03C9 Greek Small Letter Omega. This character is a Uppercase Letter and is mainly used in the Greek script. It belongs to the block U+0370 to U+03FF Greek and Coptic in the U+0000 to U+FFFF Basic Multilingual Plane. U+03A9 was added to Unicode in version 1.1 (1993). ![]() Copy to clipboard share this codepoint embed this codepoint ![]()
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