:For ''"ſ", see
Long s. For "S#arp", see
S♯arp. For other uses, see
S (disambiguation).''
'S' is the nineteenth letter of the modern
Latin alphabet. Its name in
English is pronounced ''ess'' .
In most writing systems using the Latin alphabet, as well as the
International Phonetic Alphabet, the letter ''s'' corresponds to a
voiceless alveolar sibilant. Two notable exceptions are Vietnamese and Hungarian, where it represents the
postalveolar , as in the English words "sugar" and "sure". Other languages, including English,
Portuguese and
German have words wherein "s" represents the sound, but this orthography is considered atypical.
History
| Proto-Semitic š | Phoenician S | Etruscan S | Greek Sigma |
|---|
 Proto-semiticS-01.png |  PhoenicianS-01.png |  EtruscanS-01.png | |
Semitic Šîn ("teeth") represented a
voiceless postalveolar fricative (as in ''sh''ip). The original form may have represented a picture of a
tooth, or possibly that of female
breasts.
Greek did not have this sound, so the Greek
sigma (Σ) came to represent . The name "sigma" probably comes from the Semitic letter "Sâmek" (fish; spine) and not "Šîn". In
Etruscan and
Latin, the value was maintained, and only in modern languages has the letter been used to represent other sounds, such as
voiceless postalveolar fricative in
Hungarian and
German (before p, t) or the
voiced alveolar fricative in English,
French and
German (in English ''rise''; in French ''lisez'' (="read" imperative plural); in German ''lesen'' (="to read").
Care must be taken for incompletely anglicized words from German and proper names from that language. The trigraph "sch" is pronounced like the English digraph "sh." When S is followed either by a p or t, it is pronounced with the same "sh" sound, but when starting a word followed by a vowel, it is pronounced like the English "z," (not the German one).
An alternative form of ''s'', ſ, called the
long ''s'' or medial ''s'', was used at the beginning or in the middle of the word; the modern form, the short or terminal ''s'', was used at the end of the word. For example, "sinfulness" is rendered as "ſinfulneſs" using the ''long s''. The use of the ''long s'' died out by the beginning of the
19th century, largely to prevent confusion with the
minuscule ''
f''. The ligature of ſs (or ſz) became the
German ''
ess-tsett'' ( ß ).
In a high-school
biology textbook used in the 1960s, a text discussing the discovery of
cells in animal tissue by the English biologist
Robert Hooke was photostatically reproduced, including the long "s." The explanation read, "The type is quaint, but once you notice that an ''s'' is often much like an ''f,'' you fhould have little trouble reading it."
The long ''s'' has often been parodied in
Mad Magazine, including the usage "Poor Alfred'f Almanack."
S is one of the most commonly used letters of the Latin Alphabet in Basic English language.
On June 29, 2007, "S" was posted as a news item on CNN.com, much to the amusement of readers of the website
Fark.
Codes for computing
In
Unicode the
capital S is U+0053 and the
lowercase s is U+0073.
The
ASCII code for capital S is 83 and for lowercase s is 115; or in
binary 01010011 and 01110011, correspondingly.
The
EBCDIC code for capital S is 226 and for lowercase s is 162.
The
numeric character references in
HTML and
XML are "
S" and "
s" for upper and lower case respectively.
Similar letters and symbols
★ Ş, ş — S-
cedilla
★
Š, š — S-caron
★ — S with comma below (used in
Romanian)
★ — S with acute accent (used in
Polish)
★
Ŝ, ŝ — S with circumflex accent (used in
Esperanto)
★ — S with hook (used in the
International Phonetic Alphabet for the
voiceless retroflex fricative)
★ — S with
dot above (used in old
Irish Gaelic)
★ — S with dot below (used in
Indic transliteration)
★ — S with acute and dot above
★ — S with caron and dot above
★ — S with dots below and above
★ — reversed S (used in
Zhuang transliteration)
★ ſ —
long s
★ —
Esh (used in the
International Phonetic Alphabet for the
voiceless postalveolar fricative)
★ ∫, ∫ — the
integral sign
★ $ — the
dollar sign
★ ß — the
German ''
Eszett'' or "sharp s"
★ Ѕ, ѕ —
Cyrillic letter
Dze
★ -dd — Is treated with an "S" sound in gaelic, especially at the end of words
★
§ the Section Sign
★
Superman's 'S' symbol
See also
For other meanings and uses of the letter "S", see
S (disambiguation).