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Iota

Ninth letter in the Greek alphabet


Ninth letter in the Greek alphabet

Note
Note

Greek iota

Iota (; , uppercase Ι, lowercase ι; ) is the ninth letter of the Greek alphabet. It was derived from the Phoenician letter Yodh. Letters that arose from this letter include the Latin I and J, the Cyrillic І (І, і), Yi (Ї, ї), and Je (Ј, ј), and iotated letters (e.g. Yu (Ю, ю)). In the system of Greek numerals, iota has a value of 10.

Iota represents the close front unrounded vowel . In early forms of ancient Greek, it occurred in both long and short versions, but this distinction was lost in Koine Greek. Iota participated as the second element in falling diphthongs, with both long and short vowels as the first element. Where the first element was long, the iota was lost in pronunciation at an early date, and was written in polytonic orthography as iota subscript, in other words as a very small ι under the main vowel. Examples include ᾼ ᾳ ῌ ῃ ῼ ῳ. The former diphthongs became digraphs for simple vowels in Koine Greek.

The word is used in a common English phrase, "not one iota", meaning "not the slightest amount". This refers to iota, the smallest letter, or possibly yodh, י, the smallest letter in the Hebrew alphabet. The English word jot derives from iota. The German, Polish, Portuguese, and Spanish name for the letter J (Jot / jota) is derived from iota.

Uses

  • In some programming languages (e.g., A+, APL, C++, Go), iota (either as the lowercase symbol or the identifier iota) is used to represent and generate an array of consecutive integers. For example, in APL ⍳4 gives 1 2 3 4.
  • The lowercase iota symbol is sometimes used to write the imaginary unit, but more often Roman i or j is used.
  • In mathematics, the inclusion map of one space into another is sometimes denoted by the lowercase iota.
  • In logic, the lowercase iota denotes the definite descriptor.

Unicode

For accented Greek characters, see Greek diacritics: Computer encoding.

  • ( in TeX)

References

References

  1. {{OED. iota
  2. Victor Parker, ''A History of Greece, 1300 to 30 BC'', (John Wiley & Sons, 2014), 67.
  3. "Greek numbers". History.mcs.st-and.ac.uk.
  4. see [[Koine Greek phonology]]
  5. (2020-03-30). "Yud (Hebrew Letter) - BJE".
  6. Tverberg, Lois. (2015-06-30). "Yod - One Very Significant Letter".
  7. "Jot | Define Jot at Dictionary.com". Dictionary.reference.com.
  8. Parent, Sean. (2019-01-04). "#iotashaming".
  9. (November 18, 2016). "The Go Programming Language Specification". The Go Authors.
  10. (1991). "Functional programming and its applications: an advanced course". University Microfilms International.
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