Category
page 1Diacritics
diacritic
thumb|class=skin-invert-image|Latin letter A with multiple diacritics
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diacritical mark consisting of a line drawn through a grapheme
dakuten and handakuten
Japanese diacritic signs used with Kana characters to modify the voicing of consonants
◌
dotted circle (U+25CC); note that the reference glyph is intentionally larger than the glyph used in the UCS standard to indicate combining characters
Zalgo text
distorted text containing an excess of unusual and non-meaningful combining characters, with no other goal than to obscure it with a glitchy layout, making it difficult to reproduce and read
tittle
right|thumb|150px|Lowercase i and j in Liberation fonts|Liberation Serif, with tittles highlighted in red
The tittle or superscript dot is the dot on top of lowercase i and j. In English writing the tittle is a diacritic which only appears as part of these glyphs, but diacritic dots can appear over other letters in various languages. In most languages, the tittle of i or j is omitted when a diacritic is placed in the tittle's usual position (as í or ĵ), but not when the diacritic appears elsewhere (as į, ɉ).