- X
X is the twenty-fourth letter in the modern
Latin alphabet . Its name in English is spelled ex or occasionally ecks (pronEng|ɛks), ["X" "Oxford English Dictionary," 2nd edition (1989); "Merriam-Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged" (1993); "ex," op. cit.] plural exes (pronEng|ɛksəz).History
The
consonant cluster IPA|/ks/ was, inAncient Greek , written as either "Chi" Χ (Western Greek) or "Xi" Ξ (Eastern Greek). In the end, "Chi" was standardized as IPA|/kʰ/ (IPA|/x/ inModern Greek ), while "Xi" was standardized for IPA|/ks/. But theEtruscans had taken over "Χ" from older Western Greek; therefore, it stood for IPA|/ks/ in Etruscan andLatin .It is unknown whether the letters "Chi" and "Xi" are Greek inventions, or whether they are ultimately of
Semitic origin. "Chi" was placed toward the end of the Greek alphabet, after the Semitic letters, along with "Phi", "Psi", and "Omega ", suggesting that it was an innovation; further, there is no letter corresponding specifically to the sound /ks/ in Semitic. There was a Phoenician letter form of this letter is attested.Usage
In the
International Phonetic Alphabet , IPA| [x] represents avoiceless velar fricative .In some languages, as a result of assorted phonetic changes, handwriting adaptations or simply spelling convention, "X" has other pronunciations:
*Basque: as a spelling for IPA| [ʃ] .
*Dutch: The island of Texel is pronounced as Tessel. This is because ss was written with a ligature closely resembling the x.
*English: "X" is a double consonant or, rather, a sign for the compound consonants IPA| [ks] ; or sometimes when followed by an accented syllable beginning with a vowel, or when followed by silent h and an accented vowel IPA| [gz] (e.g. "exhaust", "exam"); usually IPA| [z] at the beginnings of words (e.g. "xylophone"), and in some compounds keeps the IPA| [z] sound, as in (e.g. "meta-xylene"). It also makes the sound IPA| [kʃ] in words ending in -xion (typically used only in British-based spellings of the language; American spellings tend to use -ction). It can also represent the sounds IPA| [gʒ] or IPA| [kʃ] , for example, in the words luxury and sexual, respectively. When the letter "X" begins a word in theEnglish language such as "xynene" and a "z" sound is created the "X" is said to be silent. Final x is always IPA| [ks] (e.g. "ax"/"axe") except in loan words such as "faux" (see French, below).
*French: at the ends of words, silent (or IPA| [z] inliaison if the next word starts with a vowel). This usage arose as a handwriting alteration of final "-us". Two exceptions are pronounced [s] : "six" and "dix".
*In Italian, "X" is always pronounced| [ks] , as in the words "uxorio", "extra", "xilofono". It is also used, mainly amongst younger generations as a short form for "per" meaning "for", for example, x sempre (forever).
*In Norwegian, "X" is generally pronounced IPA| [ks] , but since the nineteenth century there has been a tendency to spell it out as "ks" whenever possible; it may still be retained in names of people, though it is fairly rare, and occurs mostly in foreign words andSMS language .
*Spanish: In Old Spanish, "X" was pronounced IPA| [ʃ] , as it is still currently in otherIberian languages . Later, the sound evolved to a hard IPA| [x] sound. In modern Spanish, the hard IPA| [x] sound is spelled with a "j", or with a "g" before "e" and "i", though "x" is still retained for some names (notably "México", which alternates with "Méjico"). Now, "X" represents the sound IPA| [s] (word-initially), or the consonat clusters IPA| [ks] and IPA| [gs] (e.g. "oxígeno", "examen"). Even rarer; like in Old Spanish, the "x" can be pronounced as IPA| [ʃ] in modern day in some proper nouns such as "Raxel" (a variant ofRachel ) and "Xelajú ". In American andseseo Spanish, the "xc" in "excelente" is pronounced as IPA| [ks] but in Spain, this combination is pronounced IPA| [ksθ] .
*Galician: In Galician (a language related to Portuguese and spoken in Northwestern Spain), "x" is pronounced as a vacillating "h", phonically similar to "j" in Spanish.
*In Portuguese, "x" can have four sounds: the most common is IPA| [ʃ] , as in 'xícara' (cup). The other sounds are: IPA| [ks] as in 'fênix/fénix' (phoenix) and IPA|s , as in 'próximo' (close/next). The most rare is IPA| [z] , as in 'exagerado' (exaggerate).
*In Albanian, "x" represents IPA| [dz] , while thedigraph "xh" represents IPA| [dʒ] .
*Polish doesn't use "X". In loanwords, "X" is either replaced by "ks" like in 'ekstra' (extra), or "gz" like in 'egzotyczny' (exotic).
*In the German and Italian languages, "X" is used mainly in foreignloan word s.
*In Maltese x is pronounced IPA| [ʃ]
*In Vietnamese x is pronounced IPA| [s]Additionally, in languages for which the Latin alphabet has been adapted only recently, "x" has been used for various sounds, in some cases inspired by European usage, but in others, for consonants uncommon in Europe. For these no Latin letter stands out as an obvious choice, and since most of the various European pronunciations of "x" can be written by other means, the letter becomes available for more unusual sounds.
*"X" has its IPA value IPA| [x] in e.g. Kurdish, Azerbaijani, Uzbek, Tatar andLojban .
*In Pirahã, "x" symbolizes the glottal stop IPA| [ʔ] .
*InHanyu Pinyin , the official transcription system forMandarin Chinese , the letter "x" represents thevoiceless alveolo-palatal fricative IPA|/ɕ/.
*Nguni languages : represents thealveolar lateral click IPA| [ǁ] .
*An illustrating example of "x" as a "leftover" letter is differing usage in three differentEast Cushitic languages :
**Afar language :voiced alveolar implosive IPA| [ɗ]
**Oromo language :alveolar ejective IPA| [tʼ]
**Somali language :voiceless pharyngeal fricative IPA| [ħ]No words in the
Basic English vocabulary begin with "X", but it occurs in words beginning with other letters. It is often found in a word with an E before it. X is the third most rarely used letter in theEnglish language .Codes for computing
Letter
NATO=X-ray
Morse=–··–
Character=X
Braille=⠭InUnicode the capital X is codepoint U+0058 and thelower case x is U+0078.The
ASCII code for capital X is 88 and for lowercase x is 120; or in binary 01011000 and 01111000, correspondingly.The
EBCDIC code for capital X is 231 and for lowercase x is 167.The
numeric character reference s inHTML andXML are "X" and "x" for upper and lower case respectively.Other uses for the letter X
imilar non-Latin letters
*Χ, χ : Greek letter Chi
*Х, х : Cyrillic Kha.
*メ : Me (Japanesekatakana character)
*א (Hebrewaleph ) sometimes looks like X when handwritten.
*乂 : A Chinese character, pronounced "Yì" inMandarin Chinese . Means "govern, settle, stable" (治理;安定). [《现代汉语词典》修订本,商务印书馆,Page 1490.]
* In pre-Norman Britain a "ᚷ" (Gyfu ) was a letter in theAnglo-Saxon futhorc runic alpabet and also indicated agift .Non-letter symbols in
Unicode *× :
multiplication sign
*╳ : box drawings left diagonal cross
*unicode|✕ : multiplication x
*unicode|✗ : ballot x
*unicode|✘ : heavy ballot x
*× : vector or cross product
* In the Japaneseresale price maintenance system for music and print publications, "saihan seido ", the typographic symbol unicode|Ⓨ marks the first date for the fixed price and unicode|Ⓧ marks the last date.See also
*
X Window System
*Ex
*X mark
*XXXX
*XXX
*XX
*Rx
*Tx
*x marks the spot References
af:X als:X ar:X arc:X ast:X az:X ca:X cs:X co:X cy:X da:X de:X et:X el:X es:X eo:X eu:X fa:X fur:X gan:X gd:X gl:X ko:X hr:X ilo:X is:X it:X he:X ka:X kw:X sw:X ht:X la:X lv:X lt:X hu:X mzn:X ms:X nah:X ja:X no:X nn:X nrm:X pt:X ro:X qu:X simple:X sk:X sl:X fi:X sv:X tl:X th:X vi:X vo:X yo:X zh-yue:X bat-smg:X zh:X
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