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Thursday, November 2, 2017

How to remember the autumn six letters of the Greek alphabet: Xi, omicron, Pi, Rho, Sigma, Tau

Greek alphabet alpha-omega.svg
Greek alphabet
ΑαAlphaΝνNu
ΒβBetaΞξXi
ΓγGammaΟοOmicron
ΔδDeltaΠπPi
ΕεEpsilonΡρRho
ΖζZetaΣσςSigma
ΗηEtaΤτTau
ΘθThetaΥυUpsilon
ΙιIotaΦφPhi
ΚκKappaΧχChi
ΛλLambdaΨψPsi
ΜμMuΩωOmega
Xi
ΞξXi
The hardest letter. Sh!

Omicron
ΟοOmicron
O is an easy letter to recognize in both capital letters and lower case.

Pi
ΠπPi
Think of it as a portal or door.
Mathematicians find this one easy.

Rho
ΡρRho
How do you remember that what looks like a P is really an R. You know all those sign writers who get the signs wrong on signposts and signs on the road. They go home early and don't finish the letters. The Russian sign writer went off for a cup of tea, or vodka. He forgot to put the last part of the letter R. It looks like P but he meant R. The two related letters are PR, as in the initials for Public Relations. P is R. Rho - row, row, row your boat, as the Eton boating song says.

Sigma
ΣσςSigma
How do you distinguish the Greek  Sigma from the Greek Zeta? Easy. The Zeta is like the English Z. It faces left, looks backward, like the last letter of the English alphabet. The Sigma may be angular like a z, but the top half or face - it faces forwards, to the right, like the English S. You start writing an S with a curve like the letter c in mid-air above the line. The lower case sigma starts the same way with a c shape. C is pronounced s in our English words police and palace.

The second small s is the final s at the end of the word. Imagine that instead of a full stop, in a signature you end with a flourish. So a person called James would write the final s with a twist on the end of the last letter. In joined up writing there's no room on the other letters but the letter with nothing after it can end with a squiggle.

Tau
ΤτTau
The letter looks the same as the English Tee. How do you remember it is Tau? Like a towel. Like a taurus.

Glossary
capital letters - the big ones, used in English to start a sentence, as initials for proper names of people such as John. (German uses capital letters for all nouns, but English only bother to use capitals for names of people or objects such as a ship's name. In an English dictionary the words start with a lower case or small letter so that you can see whether you need a capital. For example, the word Elizabeth needs the capital letter at the start. Sometimes handwritten notices are in capitals for clarity and to draw attention. For example: NO SMOKING.
lower case - small letters used in the middle of a word, for joined-up writing.

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