The Greek letter Gamma Γ is a grapheme derived from the Phoenician letter𐤂 (gīml) which was rotated from the right-to-left script of Canaanite to accommodate the Greek language's writing system of left-to-right. The Canaanite grapheme represented the /g/ phoneme in the Canaanite language, and as such is cognate with gimel ג of the Hebrew alphabet.
Based on its name, the letter has been interpreted as an abstract representation of a camel's neck,[2] but this has been criticized as contrived,[3] and it is more likely that the letter is derived from an Egyptian hieroglyph representing a club or throwing stick.[4]
In Archaic Greece, the shape of gamma was closer to a classical lambda (Λ), while lambda retained the Phoenician L-shape (𐌋).
The Ancient Greek /g/ phoneme was the voiced velar stop, continuing the reconstructed proto-Indo-European*g, *ǵ.
The modern Greek phoneme represented by gamma is realized either as a voiced palatal fricative (/ʝ/) before a front vowel (/e/, /i/), or as a voiced velar fricative/ɣ/ in all other environments. Both in Ancient and in Modern Greek, before other velar consonants (κ, χ, ξ – that is, k, kh, ks), gamma represents a velar nasal/ŋ/. A double gamma γγ (e.g., άγγελος, "angel") represents the sequence /ŋɡ/ (phonetically varying [ŋɡ~ɡ]) or /ŋɣ/.
The lowercase Latin gamma ɣ can also be used in contexts (such as chemical or molecule nomenclature) where gamma must not be confused with the letter y, which can occur in some computer typefaces.
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+213DℽDOUBLE-STRUCK SMALL GAMMA
U+213EℾDOUBLE-STRUCK CAPITAL GAMMA
U+1D6AA𝚪MATHEMATICAL BOLD CAPITAL GAMMA
U+1D6C4𝛄MATHEMATICAL BOLD SMALL GAMMA
U+1D6E4𝛤MATHEMATICAL ITALIC CAPITAL GAMMA
U+1D6FE𝛾MATHEMATICAL ITALIC SMALL GAMMA
U+1D71E𝜞MATHEMATICAL BOLD ITALIC CAPITAL GAMMA
U+1D738𝜸MATHEMATICAL BOLD ITALIC SMALL GAMMA
U+1D758𝝘MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD CAPITAL GAMMA
U+1D772𝝲MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD SMALL GAMMA
U+1D792𝞒MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD ITALIC CAPITAL GAMMA
U+1D7AC𝞬MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD ITALIC SMALL GAMMA
See also
Look up Γ or γ in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Look up Ɣ or ɣ in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
^François Cardarelli (2003). Encyclopaedia of Scientific Units, Weights and Measures. London: Springer-Verlag. ISBN978-1-4471-1122-1.
^Betty Grover Eisner, Ph.D. (August 7, 2002). Remembrances of LSD therapy past(PDF). p. 14. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2014-12-05. that fateful 100 gamma, the same dosage I had had at my first LSD session