
| Greek alphabet | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Αα Alpha | Νν Nu | ||||
| Ββ Beta | Ξξ Xi | ||||
| Γγ Gamma | Οο Omicron | ||||
| Δδ Delta | Ππ Pi | ||||
| Εε Epsilon | Ρρ Rho | ||||
| Ζζ Zeta | Σσς Sigma | ||||
| Ηη Eta | Ττ Tau | ||||
| Θθ Theta | Υυ Upsilon | ||||
| Ιι Iota | Φφ Phi | ||||
| Κκ Kappa | Χχ Chi | ||||
| Λλ Lambda | Ψψ Psi | ||||
| Μμ Mu | Ωω Omega | ||||
| Obsolete letters | |||||
| Other characters | |||||
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| Greek diacritics | |||||
Sho (Ϸ) was a letter added to the Greek alphabet in order to write the Bactrian language[1]. It probably represented a sound similar to English "sh" (IPA: /ʃ/). The name "sho" is modern; its Bactrian name is unknown, as is its order in the Bactrian alphabet.
It is similar in appearance to the Anglo-Saxon and Icelandic Latin alphabet thorn (þ).
Sho was added to Unicode in version 4.0 (2003), in an uppercase and lowercase character designed for modern typography.
| Appearance | Code points | Name |
|---|---|---|
| Ϸ | U+03F7 | GREEK CAPITAL LETTER SHO |
| ϸ | U+03F8 | GREEK SMALL LETTER SHO |
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