It is a Umlaut - it is placed over a vowel to indicate a more central articulation
Tittle. That's what it's called.
that would be called an "ellipsis."It is called ellipsis.
A tittle
You might properly call it a "tittle", but maybe not in polite company. Just call it a dot and everybody will understand.
The dot over the letter i is called a tittle.If you are trying to ask, "What is the character that has a two dots above the letter U".This is called an umlaut. The letter Ü occurs in the Hungarian, Portuguese, Catalan, Spanish alphabet, Karelian, Klingon, Turkish, Uyghur, Estonian, Azeri, Turkmen, Crimean Tatar and Tatar Latin alphabets, where it represents a close front rounded vowel ([y]). It is a distinct letter, collated separately, and not considered a simple modification of [u] or [i]. It is distinct from "UE".
... Ellipsis.
A dot above a letter is known as a 'diacritic dot'. The common name for the diacritic dot above an i or a j is a 'tittle'.
I think it is called a tittle.
The name of the punctuation mark with a dot directly above a comma is called a "semicolon."
the dot above the j is call a jot, as in 'last jot and tidle'. there is nothing above a u
The dot above the lowercase "i" and "j" is known as a tittle.
Yes, it is above the I in a lowercase I.
A tattle.The cross through the "t" is called a tattle. Also, the dot above a lower case "i" is called a tittle.
that would be called an "ellipsis."It is called ellipsis.
triangle
Tittle
The dot of an 'i' is called a tittle and the cross of a 't' is called a T-bar.
It is called a tittle The tittle first appeared in Latin manuscripts in the 11th century, to distinguish the letter i from strokes of nearby letters. Although originally a larger mark, it was reduced to a dot when Roman-style typefaces were introduced. tittle According to Oxford Dictionaries, the dot above the letters i and j are called superscript dots.