![Greek numbers in different languages symbols](https://kumkoniak.com/89.jpg)
![greek numbers in different languages symbols greek numbers in different languages symbols](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/20/78/74/207874d31da5a49773789d2779ee7290.jpg)
- #GREEK NUMBERS IN DIFFERENT LANGUAGES SYMBOLS HOW TO#
- #GREEK NUMBERS IN DIFFERENT LANGUAGES SYMBOLS FULL#
Add an ezh, from the international phonetic alphabet, and a reversed ezh and it’s got magnificent wings. The Cyrillic zhe with diaeresis above it already looks like a butterfly. The Greek lower case xi can stand in for lovely, curly locks. A good way to raise a glass to someone, or tell them you’re going out for drinks.
#GREEK NUMBERS IN DIFFERENT LANGUAGES SYMBOLS FULL#
The Chinese character for “day” looks like a half full glass. ง (Thai NGO NGU)Ī pair of these Thai velar nasal consonants make a nice “put your dukes up.” 12. Can also look like a tongue sticking out below a snout. ౪ (Telugu 4)įor toothy animals like bunnies and hamsters there’s the 4 from the script of Telugu, a language of India. Perfect for animal snouts, the lower case omega makes good kitty and puppy emoticons. The Georgian “las” can be a fist clenched in rage, an animal paw, or a palm wearily covering the face. Here the disapproving Kannada eyes take on an angry look in combination with the teeth-baring Chinese character for “profit.” This complex emoticon also uses Japanese katakana, the Chinese “hair” radical, and Unicode box-drawing characters. The “look of disapproval” emoticon uses the Kannada “ttha” (pronounced like “tha” but with the tongue in retroflex position, touching the roof of the mouth). The letter for “tha” looks like an eye, complete with eyebrow, that has a tear coming out of it. ಥ (Kannada THA)Īnother way to get to the tears is through Kannada, a language of India, which has a script particularly rich in emoticon possibilities. The Persian/Urdu Arabic 5 makes a fat little lonely tear. They also give a cute little “balled fists” look. To get raised arms tilted in opposite directions, the 9 and 6 from the Arabic script used for Persian and Urdu do nicely. It’s the syllable “tu” from the Japanese katakana syllable writing system.
#GREEK NUMBERS IN DIFFERENT LANGUAGES SYMBOLS HOW TO#
You may have seen this friendly shrug emoticon around and wondered how to get that sly grin effect. Here are 16 characters you can borrow from the writing systems of other languages to up your emoticon game. But where’s the fun in that when there’s such a big world of old school symbols and scripts to exploit? There’s an art to creating emoticons from simple characters. Now we can draw from a huge stock of full-color, properly-oriented emojis for nearly any concept we might want to express. In the old days we had to make do with primitive sideways grins, frowns, and winks.
![Greek numbers in different languages symbols](https://kumkoniak.com/89.jpg)