Arup Biswas
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And it's only made to let English native speakers look bad, as it is no "th" but originally pronounced as "teta", and of course with an "eh", not an "e".Drakkith said:
Ancient Greek: θῆτα thē̂ta [tʰɛ̂ːta]Drakkith said:Err, what?
Yes, but whether one pronounces it in modern Greek, with an "[ i ]" or in ancient Greek with an "[ e ]", the "th" is wrong, as it is the Greek version of a "t" which is pronounced as a "t". Perhaps I should start and say the Steelers are from Pittsborough ...Drakkith said:Oh, you're just saying it was originally pronounced differently than we do now.
Yes, but modern Greek is a bit different from the ancient language.TeethWhitener said:The Greek-Americans that I asked pronounce it "thita," rhyming with "pita" but enunciating the t.
We usually loot every alphabet we can get a hand on ##a,b,c,\ldots , \alpha,\beta,\gamma,\ldots , \mathfrak{a},\mathfrak{g},\mathfrak{h},\ldots, \mathbb{C},\mathbb{F},\mathbb{N},\ldots ,\mathcal{A},\mathcal{B},\mathcal{C},\ldots , \mathscr{A},\mathscr{B},\mathscr{C}##Arup Biswas said:Isberg and Resnick really confuses me [emoji24] He could use beta,gamma or anything, instead of this uppercase theta [emoji26]
Don't forget the Hebrew letter aleph (##\aleph##), as in ##\aleph_0, \aleph_1## and so on.fresh_42 said:We usually loot every alphabet we can get a hand on ##a,b,c,\ldots , \alpha,\beta,\gamma,\ldots , \mathfrak{a},\mathfrak{g},\mathfrak{h},\ldots, \mathbb{C},\mathbb{F},\mathbb{N},\ldots ,\mathcal{A},\mathcal{B},\mathcal{C},\ldots , \mathscr{A},\mathscr{B},\mathscr{C}##
that it makes me wonder why we don't use и , я , ч , etc.