r rotunda
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From or representing Latin r rotunda (literally “round ‘r’”). The adjective rotunda is the feminine form of rotundus, inflected to agree with littera (“letter”), elliptically omitted (compare e caudata). The phrase is little attested in Latin, and might have been formed in English, or been borrowed from another language which formed it from those Latin roots.
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˌɑː.ɹəʊˈtʌn.də/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˌɑɹ.ɹoʊˈtʌn.də/
Noun
[edit]r rotunda (plural rs rotunda or rs rotundae)
- (typography) A curved form of the letter r, found in some medieval and fraktur scripts: ⟨ ꝛ ⟩.
- Coordinate term: straight r
- 1989, Arend Quak, Florus (Floor) Rhee, Palaeogermanica et onomastica., Rodopi (→ISBN), page 3:
- […] completely informed about the decisions made and the reasons to make them, e.g. r rotunda does not figure in the transcription as the use of straight r and r rotunda is governed by the preceding character and thus completely predictable.
- 2000, Anna A. Grotans, Heinrich Beck, Anton Schwob, De consolatione philogiae: studies in honor of Evelyn S. Firchow, volume 2, page 624:
- And certain geminated consonants are represented by capitals : ɢ, ɴ, ʀ, ꜱ. Does a form like haʀ mean a long r, or is it a scribal habit on the level of the usage of r rotunda, not straight r, after round letters? The occurrence of forms with -rr […]
Translations
[edit]curved form of the letter r
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