- E
E is the fifth letter in the
Latin alphabet . Its name in English is spelled e (pronEng|iː), plural es or ees (also written E's, "E"s, e's, etc.). ["E" "Merriam-Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged" (1993)] The letter "E" is the most commonly used letter in the Czech,cite web|url=http://www.bckelk.ukfsn.org/words/etaoin.html|title=Letter frequencies|last=Kelk|first=Brian|publisher=UK Free Software Network|accessdate=2008-06-25] Danish, Dutch, English, [cite web|url=http://pages.central.edu/emp/LintonT/classes/spring01/cryptography/letterfreq.html|title=Relative Frequencies of Letters in General English Plain text|last=Lewand|first=Robert|work=Cryptographical Mathematics|publisher=Central College |accessdate=2008-06-25] French, [cite web|url=http://www.santacruzpl.org/readyref/files/g-l/ltfrqfr.shtml|title=Frequency of Occurrence of Letters in French|publisher=Santa Cruz Public Libraries|accessdate=2008-06-25] German, [cite web|url=http://scplweb.santacruzpl.org/readyref/files/g-l/ltfrqger.shtml|title=Frequency of Occurrence of Letters in German|publisher=Santa Cruz Public Libraries|accessdate=2008-06-25] Hungarian, Latin, Norwegian, Spanish, [cite web|url=http://www.santacruzpl.org/readyref/files/g-l/ltfrqsp.shtml|title=Frequency of Occurrence of Letters in Spanish|publisher=Santa Cruz Public Libraries|accessdate=2008-06-25] and Swedish languages.History
E is derived from the Greek letter
epsilon which is much the same in appearance (Ε, ε) and function. Inetymology , theSemitic "hê" probably first represented a praying or calling human figure ("hillul " jubilation), and was probably based on a similarEgyptian hieroglyph that was pronounced and used quite differently. In Semitic, the letter represented IPA|/h/ (and IPA|/e/ in foreign words), in Greek "hê" became Εψιλον (Epsilon) with the value IPA|/e/. Etruscans and Romans followed this usage. Arising from theGreat Vowel Shift , English usage is rather different, namely IPA|/iː/ (derived from IPA|/eː/ in "me" or "bee") whereas other words like "bed" are closer to Latin and other languages in usage.Usage
Like other Latin
vowel s, E came in a long and a short variety. Originally, the only difference was in length but later on, short e represented IPA|/ɛ/. In other languages that use the letter E or e, it represents various other phonetic values, sometimes with accents to indicate contrasts (e ê é è ë ē ĕ ě ẽ ė ẹ ę ẻ).Digraphs starting with E are common in many languages to indicatediphthong s andmonophthong s, such as EA or EE for IPA|/iː/ or IPA|/eɪ/ in English, EI for IPA|/aɪ/ in German, or EU for IPA|/ø/ in French or IPA|/ɔɪ/ in German.At the end of a word, E is very often silent in English (
silent e ), where old nouninflections have been dropped, although even when silent at the end of a word it often causes vowels in the word to be pronounced asdiphthongs , conventionally called long vowels (compare as a noun "rat" and as a verb "rate").The letter 'E' is the most common (or highest frequency) letter in the
English language (starting off the typographer's phraseETAOIN SHRDLU ) and many other relatedlanguages , which has implications in bothcryptography anddata compression . This makes it a difficult and popular letter to use when writinglipogram s.Ernest Vincent Wright 's "Gadsby" (1939 ), is considered a "dreadful" novel, and that "at least part of Wright's narrative difficulties were caused by language restrictions imposed by the lack of "E"." [Ross Eckler, "Making the Alphabet Dance: Recreational Word Play". New York: St. Martin's Press (1996): 3] BothGeorges Perec 's novel "A Void" ("La Disparition") (1969) and its English translation by Gilbert Adair omit the letter E and are considered better works. [Eckler (1996): 3. Perec's novel "was so well written that at least some reviewers never realized the existence of a letter constraint."]Codes for computing
Letter
NATO=Echo
Morse=·
Character=E5
Braille=⠑InUnicode the capital E is codepoint U+0045 and thelower case e is U+0065.The
ASCII code for capital E is 69 and for lowercase e is 101; or in binary 01000101 and 01100101, correspondingly.The
EBCDIC code for capital E is 197 and for lowercase e is 133.The
numeric character reference s inHTML andXML are "E" and "e" for upper and lower case respectively.ources
ee also
Similar Latin letters:
*Ɛɛ : Latin epsilonSimilar non-Latin letters:
*Εε : Greek epsilon
*Ее : Cyrillic Ye/E
*Ёё : Cyrillic Yo
*Єє :Ukrainian Ye
*Ээ : Cyrillic backwards ESimilar phonetic symbols:
*IPA|e :
Close-mid front unrounded vowel
*IPA|ɛ :Open-mid front unrounded vowel Special symbols similar to the letter E:
*℮ :
Estimated sign (used on prepackaged goods for sale within the European Union).
*€ :Euro sign af:E als:E ar:E an:E arc:E ast:E az:E bs:E bg:E ca:E cs:E co:E cy:E da:E de:E el:E es:E eo:E eu:E fa:E fur:E gan:E gd:E gl:E ko:E hr:E ilo:E is:E it:E he:E ka:E kw:E sw:E ht:E la:E lv:E lb:E lt:E hu:E mzn:E ms:E nah:E ja:E no:E nn:E nrm:E nds:E pl:E pt:E crh:E ro:E qu:E se:E simple:E sk:E sl:E fi:E sv:E tl:E th:E vi:E vo:E yo:E zh-yue:E bat-smg:E zh:E
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