Å
"Å", or "å", is a letter, representing a vowel, in the Swedish, Finnish, Danish and Norwegian alphabets.
The letter "Å" is also used throughout the world as the international symbol for the non-SI unit angstrom, or angstrom, a physical unit of length named after the Swedish physicist Anders Jonas Ångström. It is always upper case in this context.
The letter "Å" is often perceived as an "A" with a ring, interpreting the ring as a diacritic mark. However, the ring is not a diacritic. Rather, the letter developed as a form of semi-ligature of two consecutive "A"s. The letter represents a sound which according to historical linguistics has the same origin as the long /A:/ sound in German Aachen and Haar (Danish hår, English hair).
It has been used in Scandinavian languages since medieval times when the futhark was exchanged for the Latin alphabet. Although it was abandoned in Danish due to German influence, it has been retained in Swedish. The letter was re-introduced in Norwegian in 1917 and in Danish in 1948. The letter is also used in the Chamorro language.
In Danish and Norwegian languages, "Aa" is considered equivalent to "Å", in as much as "Aa" is the old spelling, and a fully functional transcription for "Å" when using a foreign typewriter. In surnames, and occasionally in names of geographical places, the old spelling with "Aa" is retained. Correct alphabetisation in Danish and Norwegian places "Aa" along with "Å" as the last letter in the alphabet.
In the Swedish alphabet, "Å" is sorted immediately after "Z", as the third letter from the end. In the Finnish alphabet, the letter is treated just as in Swedish, but its usage is limited to Swedish names.
In the Norwegian, Danish and Swedish languages, å is even an entire word, meaning a rivulet, a stream or a small river, like the rivers Aa, Au and Aue on the European continent.
For
computers,
when
using
the
ISO
8859-1
or
Unicode
sets,
the
codes
for
"Å"
and
"å"
are
respectively
197
and
229,
or
C5
and
E5
in
hexadecimal.
In
HTML
character
entity
references,
required
in
cases
where
the
letter
is
not
available
by
ordinary
coding,
the
codes
are
Åand
å.
Unicode
also
allows
code
8491
(212B
in
hexadecimal)
when
the
letter
is
used
specifically
as
a
symbol
for
the
ångström,
but
197
is
preferred.
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