Sigma


Sigma is the eighteenth letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals, it has a value of 200. In general mathematics, uppercase is used as an operator for summation. When used at the end of a letter-case word, the final form is used. In label=none, for example, note the two lowercase sigmas in the center of the name and the word-final sigma at the end.

History

The shape and alphabetic position of sigma is derived from the Phoenician letter .
Sigma's original name may have been san, but due to the complicated early history of the Greek epichoric alphabets, san came to be identified as a separate letter in the Greek alphabet, represented as Ϻ.
Herodotus reports that "san" was the name given by the Dorians to the same letter called "sigma" by the Ionians.
According to one hypothesis, the name "sigma" may continue that of Phoenician samekh, the letter continued through Greek xi, represented as Ξ. Alternatively, the name may have been a Greek innovation that simply meant 'hissing', from the root of σίζω.

Lunate sigma

Derived alphabets

Sigma was adopted in the Old Italic alphabets beginning in the 8th century BC.
A simplified three-stroke version, omitting the lowermost stroke, is found already in Western Greek alphabets,
and becomes current in classical Etruscan and in Oscan, as well as in the earliest Latin epigraphy, such as the Duenos inscription.
The alternation between three and four strokes is also adopted into the early runic alphabet.
Both the Anglo-Saxon runes and the Younger Futhark consistently use the simplified three-stroke version.
The forms of the Coptic letter sima and
of Cyrillic letter es are derived from lunate sigma.

Uses

Language and linguistics

Mathematics

Greek Sigma

Coptic Sima

Mathematical Sigma

These characters are used only as mathematical symbols. Stylized Greek text should be encoded using the normal Greek letters, with markup and formatting to indicate text style.

Citations