The modern English alphabet consists of the 26 lettersSee also the section on Ligatures of the Latin alphabet:
| upper case: | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |
| lower case: | a | b | c | d | e | f | g | h | i | j | k | l | m | n | o | p | q | r | s | t | u | v | w | x | y | z |
In the year 1011, a writer named Byrhtferð ordered the Old English alphabet for numerological purposes.Michael Everson, Evertype, Baldur Sigurðsson, Íslensk Málstöð ON THE STATUS OF THE LATIN LETTER ÞORN AND OF ITS SORTING ORDER He listed the 24 letters of the Latin alphabet (including ampersand) first, then 5 additional English letters, starting with the nota or ond, ⁊, which was a specifically English symbol for and:
| Letter | Letter name (IPA) |
| A | a |
| B | bee |
| C | cee |
| D | dee |
| E | e |
| F | ef (spelled eff as a verb) |
| G | gee |
| H | aitch or haitch in Hiberno-English |
| I | i |
| J | jay |
| K | kay |
| L | el |
| M | em |
| N | en |
| O | o |
| P | pee |
| Q | cue |
| R | ar (rhotic) or (non-rhotic) (see rhotic and non-rhotic accents) |
| S | ess (spelled es- in compounds like es-hook) |
| T | tee |
| U | u |
| V | vee |
| W | double-u |
| X | ex |
| Y | wy (sometimes spelled wye) |
| Z | zed ; zee in American English |
Unfortunately, these common names for the letters are often hard to distinguish from each other when heard. The NATO phonetic alphabet gives each letter a name specifically designed to sound different from any other. Therefore, aircraft pilots and many other people use the NATO phonetic alphabet names instead of these common names.
In Old English, Æ was adopted as a letter on its own and called æsc ("ash"), and in very early Old English Œ also appeared as a distinct letter named œðel ("ethel"), both after Futhorc runes.
Other Old English letters (also used in Middle English and modern Icelandic) are Þ (thorn) and Ð (eth), both now th with the exception of being y in a few archaisms like Ye Olde Booke Shoppe.
The variant lower-case form (long s) lasted into early modern English, and was used in non-final position up to the early nineteenth century.
The ampersand (&, &) has sometimes appeared at the end of the English alphabet as with Byrhtferð's list of letters in 1011. The figure is properly speaking a ligature for the letters Et. In English it is used to represent the word and and occasionally the Latin word et, as in the abbreviation &c (et cetera).
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"English alphabet".
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