P is the sixteenth letter of the modern Latin alphabet. Its name in English ( ) is spelled pee.
Welcome to CWAnswers
CWAnswers is your guide to the sprawling world wide web. The directory aims to provide a useful guide made by users. You can share your knowledge as well - simply sign up and edit your first entry. For questions just contact the team at support - at - cwanswers.com.
Weblinks for P
Top 10 for P
Things about P you find nowhere else.
Select content modules
P.A.P. Blog - Politics, Art and Philosophy
Human rights, incl. political & economic rights, from the perspective of politics, art, philosophy, law, economics & statisticsfilipspagnoli.wordpress.com/P.R.O.V.E. Blog
I have stared this blog to serve as a living testament of how I will make it ... would like to follow my journey, sign up to this blog feed. ... Tim Linden Blog ...provingit2u.blogspot.com/P.A.W.G Blog
Also since this is my blog don't get offended if and when I post some pix of ... Brah, its my blog and if I feel they are a good fit for the site so be it! ...pawgblog.wordpress.com/P.O.V. - Acclaimed Point-of-View Documentary Films | PBS
Online companion to Point Of View, a PBS series airing independent documentaries; site includes schedule, searchable archive, links to special related sites, and forums for people to discuss P.O.V. features.www.pbs.org/pov/P-3 Blog - INPEACE: The Institute for Native Pacific Education And Culture
Posted by Blog Master at 4:38 PM 2 comments. Autism in the Classroom ... Posted by Blog Master at 3:59 PM 3 comments ... Posted by Blog Master at 2:35 PM 1 ...p3conversations.blogspot.com/P is the sixteenth letter of the modern Latin alphabet. Its name in English ( ) is spelled pee.
History
The Semitic Pê (mouth), as well as the Greek Π or π (Pi), and the Etruscan and Latin letters that developed from the former alphabet, all symbolized /p/, a voiceless bilabial plosive.
Usage
In English and most other European languages, P is a voiceless bilabial plosive. Both initial and final Ps can be combined with many other discrete consonants in English words. A common example of assimilation is the tendency of prefixes ending in N to assume an M sound before Ps (such as "in" + "pulse" → "impulse" — see also List of Latin words with English derivatives).
A common digraph in English is "ph", which represents the voiceless labiodental fricative /f/, and can be used to transliterate Phi (φ) in loanwords from Greek. In German, the digraph "pf" is common, representing a labial affricate of /pf/.
Those who speak Arabic are usually unaccustomed to pronouncing /p/; they pronounce it as /b/.
Codes for computing
In Unicode, the capital "P" is codepoint U+0050 and the lower case "p" is U+0070.
The ASCII code for capital "P" is 80 and for lowercase "p" is 112; or, in binary, 01010000 and 01110000, respectively.
The EBCDIC code for capital "P" is 215 and for lowercase "p" is 151.
The numeric character references in HTML and XML are "P" and "p" for upper and lower case, respectively.
See also
- Þ or þ
- ℗ or (P)
- П, п - Pe (Cyrillic)
- Р, р - Er (Cyrillic)
- Π, π - Pi (Greek)
- פ, ף - Pe (Hebrew)


























