G
The Greek capital letter for Gamma is Γ.
The letter C in Greek is called "sigma." It is equivalent to the English letter S.
The Third letter of the Greek alphabet is Γ,γ (gamma/γάμμα) which is proportional to the English letter G,g.
The letter that comes after beta in the Greek alphabet is gamma.
The swastika is sometimes referred to as a gammadion because of its resemblance to the Greek letter gamma (Γ) when it is rotated. The term "gammadion" comes from the Greek word "gamma," which is the third letter in the Greek alphabet.
Σ (capital) σ ς ( the third is only put when s is used at the end of a word)
The Greek letter "gamma" (γ) represents a type of high frequency electromagnetic radiation known as gamma rays. Gamma rays have the shortest wavelengths and highest frequencies in the electromagnetic spectrum.
the one that looks like a Y
The fifth letter of the Greek alphabet is epsilon. It is shaped and used like an English "e". It is written as uppercase Ε, lowercase ε, and the Greek name is Έψιλον. Epsilon follows Alpha, Beta, Gamma, and Delta.
The symbol for gamma rays is the Greek letter γ (gamma). It is often used in physics and other scientific fields to represent gamma radiation, which is a type of electromagnetic radiation with high energy and short wavelengths.
Yes, they are just two different ways of romanising the Greek name¨Γεώργιος". "Georgios" is a graphemic transliteration (more etymological and faithful to the Greek spelling) in that the Greek letter gamma (γ) usually corresponds to an English 'g', whereas "Yeoryios" is a phonetic transcription (more faithful to the actual Greek pronunciation), since the letter gamma is pronounced like an English y when it comes before certain letters, such as epsilon (ε) and iota (ι). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanization_of_Greek
There are six Greek letters that are commonly used in the English language: alpha, beta, gamma, delta, epsilon, and omega.