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tilde

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: Tilde and tildé

English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
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Etymology

Borrowed from Spanish tilde, from Latin titulus (superscript) or from tildar. Doublet of titer/titre, title, titlo, tittle, and titulus. Compare Portuguese til.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈtɪldə/, /ˈtɪldi/
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɪldə

Noun

tilde (plural tildes)

  1. A diacritical mark˜⟩ placed above a letter to modify its pronunciation.
    1. In Spanish, ⟨ñ⟩ is a palatalized ⟨n⟩, for example in ⟨cañón⟩.
    2. In Portuguese, ⟨ã⟩ and ⟨õ⟩ are nasalized vowels, for example in ⟨canção⟩.
      • 2021, Claire Cock-Starkey, Hyphens & Hashtags, Bodleian Library, page 162:
        The tilde was used similarly in Portuguese on vowels to show that the letter bearing the tilde should be pronounced nasally.
    3. Another name for the Vietnamese tone mark dấu ngã, which is placed above a vowel to indicate a creaky rising tone (thanh ngã).
    4. Another name for apex, a curved diacritic used in the 17th century to mark final nasalization in the early Vietnamese alphabet. It was an adoption of the Portuguese tilde.
  2. A symbol ⟨~⟩, with various names and uses, also known as swung dash or wave dash. In the computer industry, various other names may be used, such as squiggle and twiddle.
    • 1992, Robert Bringhurst, The Elements of Typographic Style:
      swung dash A stock keyboard character, used in mathematics as the sign of similarity (a ~ b) and in lexicography as a sign of repetition. The same sign has been used in symbolic logic to indicate negation, but to avoid confusion, the angular negation symbol (¬) is preferred. Not to be confused with the tilde.
    1. The character encoded as decimal 126 in the 1967 ASCII character set, and later in the 1992 Unicode character set.
    2. A punctuation mark that indicates range (from a number to another number). This use is common in Asia, where the symbol in this case is also called a wave dash.
    3. In lexicography, the ⟨~⟩ symbol is used used to indicate the repetition of the topical word or item. In this case, the symbol is also called a swung dash.
    4. May be used to represent approximation, in English prose and in mathematics. For example, “My dog weighs ~30 pounds.”
    5. (logic) An alternate form of the logical negation operator, which is usually written as ¬.

Historical notes

In reference works from the 1950's and earlier (i.e., pre-ASCII), the second meaning of the word “tilde” is not attested. For example, in The Oxford English Dictionary (1933) and Webster's New Twentieth Century Dictionary (1956), only the meaning of “tilde” as a diacritic is attested.

In the 1967 ASCII standard, the Tilde character was specified to look like a free-floating tilde diacritic (˜), and was intended to be used as a diacritic, by printing it over letters (using overprinting on a paper based computer terminal). In later years, the character was repurposed by users to serve as the symbol ⟨~⟩, and many fonts were changed to match this new de-facto definition. Hence, the word “tilde” entered English as a name for the ⟨~⟩ symbol.

Derived terms

Translations

The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

See also

  • ASCII
  • hyphen
  • swung dash – Specific type of tilde, positioned in middle height of line.
  • apex – visually similar diacritic in Middle Vietnamese that is often confused with the tilde
  • ~

Anagrams

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Asturian

Noun

tilde f (plural tildes)

  1. (orthography) accent

Synonyms

Crimean Tatar

Noun

tilde

  1. locative singular of til

Dutch

Pronunciation

Verb

tilde

  1. inflection of tillen:
    1. singular past indicative
    2. (dated or formal) singular past subjunctive

Anagrams

Finnish

Etymology

From Spanish tilde.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈtilde/, [ˈt̪ilde̞]
  • Rhymes: -ilde
  • Syllabification(key): til‧de
  • Hyphenation(key): til‧de

Noun

tilde

  1. tilde

Declension

More information nominative, genitive ...
More information first-person singular possessor, singular ...

Synonyms

Further reading

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French

Pronunciation

Noun

tilde m (plural tildes)

  1. tilde

Further reading

Anagrams

Interlingua

Noun

tilde

  1. tilde

Italian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈtil.de/
  • Rhymes: -ilde
  • Hyphenation: tìl‧de

Noun

tilde m or f (plural tildi)

  1. tilde (all senses)
  2. (typography) tilde, squiggle

Spanish

Tagalog

Turkish

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