Ï


Ï, lowercase ï, is a symbol used in various languages written with the Latin alphabet; it can be read as the letter I with diaeresis or I-umlaut.
In Afrikaans, Catalan, Dutch, French, Galician, Welsh, Southern Sami, and occasionally English, is used when follows another vowel and indicates hiatus in the pronunciation of such a word. It indicates that the two vowels are pronounced in separate syllables, rather than together as a diphthong or digraph. For example, French maïs ; without the diaeresis, the is part of the digraph : mais. The letter is also in Dutch Oekraïne, and English naïve.
In scholarly writing on Turkic languages, is sometimes used to write the close back unrounded vowel, which, in the standard modern Turkish alphabet, is written as the dotless i. The back neutral vowel reconstructed in Proto-Mongolic is sometimes written.
In the transcription of Amazonian languages, ï is used to represent the high central vowel.
It is also a transliteration of the rune .

Computing

Lowercase ï occurs in the sequence , which is the Unicode byte order mark in UTF-8 misinterpreted as
ISO-8859-1 or CP1252. Thus, it tends to indicate that any following mojibake can be corrected by reinterpreting the data as UTF-8.