Nu (/ˈnj/; uppercase Ν, lowercase ν; Greek: ni [ni]) is the thirteenth letter of the Greek alphabet, representing the voiced alveolar nasal IPA: [n]. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 50. It is derived from the Phoenician nun . Its Latin equivalent is N, though the lowercase () resembles the Roman lowercase v.

The name of the letter is written νῦ in Ancient Greek and traditional Modern Greek polytonic orthography, while in Modern Greek it is written νι [ni].

Letters that arose from nu include Roman N and Cyrillic script En.

Symbology

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Bust of Nikos Kazantzakis with the traditional Greek nu

The lower-case letter ν is used as a symbol in many academic fields. Uppercase nu is not used, because it appears identical to Latin N.

Unicode

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Encodings of Greek Nu and Coptic Ni.[2]

  • U+039D Ν GREEK CAPITAL LETTER NU (Ν)
  • U+03BD ν GREEK SMALL LETTER NU (ν) (\nu in TeX)
  • U+2C9A COPTIC CAPITAL LETTER NI
  • U+2C9B COPTIC SMALL LETTER NI

These characters are used only as mathematical symbols. Stylized Greek text should be encoded using the normal Greek letters, with markup and formatting to indicate text style:

  • U+1D6B4 𝚴 MATHEMATICAL BOLD CAPITAL NU
  • U+1D6CE 𝛎 MATHEMATICAL BOLD SMALL NU
  • U+1D6EE 𝛮 MATHEMATICAL ITALIC CAPITAL NU
  • U+1D708 𝜈 MATHEMATICAL ITALIC SMALL NU
  • U+1D728 𝜨 MATHEMATICAL BOLD ITALIC CAPITAL NU
  • U+1D742 𝝂 MATHEMATICAL BOLD ITALIC SMALL NU
  • U+1D762 𝝢 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD CAPITAL NU
  • U+1D77C 𝝼 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD SMALL NU
  • U+1D79C 𝞜 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD ITALIC CAPITAL NU
  • U+1D7B6 𝞶 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD ITALIC SMALL NU

See also

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References

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