Science Fair Project Dictionary
E
| Table of contents |
Translingual
Letter
E e
- The fifth and most common letter of the English alphabet, preceded by D and followed by F, and representing /E/ (short) or /iː/ (long).
Other Forms
- With grave: è
- With acute: é
- With circumflex: ê
- With diaeresis: ë
- With macron: ē
- With breve: ĕ
- With dot above: ė
- With ogonek : ę
- With caron: ě
- Reversed: ɘ
- Turned: ǝ
- With double grave: ȅ
- With inverted breve: ȇ
- With cedilla: ȩ
- With macron and grave: ḕ
- With macron and acute: ḗ
- With circumflex below: ḙ
- With tilde below: ḛ
- With cedilla and breve: ḝ
- With dot below: ẹ
- With hook above: ẻ
- With tilde: ẽ
- With circumflex and acute: ế
- With circumflex and grave: ề
- With circumflex and hook: ể
- With circumflex and tilde: ễ
- With circumflex and dot below: ệ
See Also
Symbol
e
- The base of natural logarithms , an irrational number with a value of approximately 2.718281828459
English
Noun
E, e
- The fifth letter of the Roman alphabet.
Symbol
E
- Representing × 10x in floating-point notation.
- 2E5 = 2 × 105
- Energy.
- (ESRB Rating:) Everyone.
Abbreviation
E
Interlingua
Conjunction
e
Also: et.
Italian
Conjunction
e (ed before a vowel)
Portuguese
Conjunction
e
Scottish Gaelic
Pronoun
e
- 3rd person singular masculine non-emphatic pronoun
Related terms
- esan (emphatic)
Translations
Spanish
Conjunction
e
E -- Ea Eb Ec Ed Ee Ef Eg Eh Ei Ej Ek El Em En Eo Ep Eq Er Es Et Eu Ev Ew Ex Ey Ez
10-26-2009 07:45:12
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


