- For the Arthurian character named Kay, see Sir Kay.
- For the corporation, see Kellogg's
- For the programming language, see K programming language.
- For the chemical element Potassium (Kalium), see Potassium.
| Egyptian hieroglyph D
| Proto-Semitic K
| Phoenician K
| Etruscan K
| Greek Kappa
| -
| d
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The letter K is the eleventh letter in the Latin alphabet. It comes from the Greek Κ or κ (Kappa) developed from the Semitic Kap, symbol for an open hand. This in turn was likely adapted by Semites who had lived in Egypt, from the hieroglyph for "hand" representing D for the Egyptian word for hand, d-r-t. The Semites evidently assigned it the sound value K instead, because their word for hand started with that sound.
This Semitic sound value /k/ was maintained in most classic as well as modern languages, although Latin abandoned the use of K almost completely, preferring C. When Greek words were taken into Latin, the Kappa was converted to C. Some words from other alphabets were also transliterated into C. Therefore, the Romance languages have K only in words from still other language groups.
Some English linguists prefer to reverse the Latin transliteration process for proper names in Greek, spelling Ceres as "Keres", for example. And the writing down of languages that don't have their own alphabet with the Latin one has resulted in a standardization of the letter K for this sound, as in Kwakiutl.
Its name in English is kay . In English, it is generally pronounced with the /k/ sound, but is silent when followed by an n, in words like knowledge.
In the International phonetic alphabet, * is the symbol for the voiceless velar plosive. Several languages use characters with sharp angles to indicate the sound /k/ or syllables that start with a /k/, for example:Japanese 久, Arabic ﮐ, Hebrew כ (in some fonts), Korean 기. However, there are also many examples of rounded letters for /k/, like ค in Thai or Գ in Armenian.
Codes for computing
In Unicode the capital K is codepoint U+004B and the lowercase k is U+006B.
The ASCII code for capital K is 75 and for lowercase k is 107; or in binary 01001011 and 01101011, correspondingly.
The EBCDIC code for capital K is 210, and for lowercase k, 146.
The numeric character references in HTML and XML are "K" and "k" for upper and lower case respectively.
Meanings for K
- In accounting and investment banking, K = 1000 (similar to the use in the SI system below).
- In astronomy, K is a provisional designation prefix for any comet, asteroid, or minor planet discovered between May 16 and 31 of a year.
- In baseball, K is the abbreviation for a swinging strikeout. (A backwards K is the symbol for a "looking" strikeout in baseball scorekeeping.) The letter K is also commonly used, particularly in boxscores and other contexts that don't distinguish between swinging and looking strikeouts, to indicate a strikeout of any kind.
- In biochemistry, K is the symbol for the amino acid lysine.
- In Boolean algebra, a K-map is an abbreviation for a Karnaugh map.
- In chemistry,
- In chess, K is a notation symbol for the king piece.
- In the CMYK color model, K stands for the color black.
- In commerce, a circled K, , on a food product indicates kosher certification.
- In combinatory logic of computer science, K is the name of a fundamental combinator, the constant function.
- In computing,
- In Discordianism, a circled K, , indicates the material is Kopyleft
- In economics, K is the abbreviation for income.
- In education, K is the abbreviation for kindergarten, as in K-12.
- In engineering, K is an abbreviation denoting a kip (1k = 1000 pound force).
- In English slang, K is an abbreviation for ketamine.
- In film, K is a character played by Tommy Lee Jones in the films Men in Black and Men in Black 2
- In finance, K is the New York Stock Exchange ticker symbol for the Kellogg Company.
- In Hong Kong slang, K is the abbreviation for karaoke.
- In gold, K is the abbreviation for karat (in the American spelling).
- In international license plate codes, K stands for Cambodia.
- In internet slang, K stands for okay.
- In law, K is a common abbreviation for contract.
- In library science, K is the Library of Congress classification designation for books about law.
- In logic, K is the simplest system of modal logic (K stands for "Kripke").
- In mathematics, Kn denotes the complete graph on n vertices.
- In music, K. numbers identify the compositions of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in the catalog compiled by Ludwig von Köchel (sometimes abbreviated K.V., standing for Köchel-Verzeichnis). K. numbers are also used to identify the compositions of Domenico Scarlatti in the catalog compiled by Ralph Kirkpatrick. K is also an album by Kula Shaker and an independent record company based in Olympia, Washington, co-founded by Calvin Johnson.
- In nutrition, K is a vitamin which is essential in blood coagulation (or, as it is known in German, koagulation, thus the name).
- In physics,
- In a deck of playing cards, the letter K is used to mark each of the kings.
- In politics, K refers to the Keskustapuolue (Centre Party of Finland).
- K can be short for the record label K Records.
- As the first letter of a postal code,
- In radio communication
- In semiconductors, electronics, and physics, it is the symbol for the dielectric constant. See Low-K.
- In the SI system (the metric system),
- k is an SI prefix denoting 103 = 1,000 (one thousand). Consequently, the letter K can be used in spoken conversation to mean "thousand". Compare with use as a binary prefix in computing above. In the case of money, the notation $12k is used for $12,000, not k$12 or 12 k$.
- K is the symbol for the SI base unit for temperature, the kelvin.
- In World War II, K was the designation for Japanese Navy trainer aircraft.
- In the work of Franz Kafka, the protagonist of The Trial is called Joseph K., and the protagonist of The Castle is called simply K.
- K is usually the beginning letter in Applications designed for KDE, usually due to a deliberate misspelling (e.g., Konqueror)
- crown
See also
Latin letters
K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K (letter) | K | K | K | K | K | K | K (латиница) | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K | K