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a b Constable, Peter (2004-04-19). "L2/04-132 Proposal to add additional phonetic characters to the UCS" (PDF). Perry, David J. (2006-08-01). "L2/06-269: Proposal to Add Additional Ancient Roman Characters to UCS" (PDF). Forte". Virginia Tech Multimedia Music Dictionary. Archived from the original on 20 October 2014 . Retrieved 19 March 2012. F with stroke is used in the Anthropos phonetic transcription system [7] [8] and older Ewe writing [9]
Everson, Michael (2005-08-12). "L2/05-193R2: Proposal to add Claudian Latin letters to the UCS" (PDF).Miller, Kirk; Cornelius, Craig (2020-09-25). "L2/20-251: Unicode request for modifier Latin capital letters" (PDF). Modifier letter capital F [11] - Used to mark tone for the Chatino orthography in Oaxaca, Mexico; Used as a generic transcription for a falling tone; Used in para- IPA notation
In the Hepburn romanization of Japanese, ⟨f⟩ is used to represent [ɸ]. This sound is usually considered to be an allophone of /h/, which is pronounced in different ways depending upon its context; Japanese /h/ is pronounced as [ɸ] before /u/. In spoken Icelandic, ⟨f⟩ in the middle of a word is often pronounced as [v] (e.g. Að sofa - to sleep).
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An italic letter f is conventionally used to denote an arbitrary function. See also f with hook (ƒ). In the English writing system ⟨f⟩ is used to represent the sound / f/, the voiceless labiodental fricative. It is often doubled at the end of words. Exceptionally, it represents the voiced labiodental fricative / v/ in the common word "of". F is the eleventh least frequently used letter in the English language (after G, Y, P, B, V, K, J, X, Q, and Z), with a frequency of about 2.23% in words.