That is the extinct Greek letter "Sampi". It is believed that it was pronounced TS or SS.
The Greek letter Ϡ, called koppa, represents the /k/ sound, similar to the English letter "k". However, it is not commonly used in modern Greek and has been replaced by the letter kappa.
The Greek letter "o" is pronounced as the short "o" sound, similar to the "o" in the English word "top."
Mu (the sound of m. Looks like u with an extended left or M as a capital)
The 23rd letter of the Greek alphabet is Psi. It is written as Ψ in uppercase and ψ in lowercase. It represents the sound equivalent to the English "ps" in words like "psychology."
The 2 letter word "uh" has the same vowel sound as "mule".
The Greek letter omicron is pronounced like "ah-mih-KRAHN," with a short "o" sound. In contrast, the Greek letter omega is pronounced like "oh-MEH-gah," with a long "o" sound. Omega is typically pronounced a bit longer and with a slightly different emphasis compared to omicron.
There aren't any. The sound didn't exist in ancient Greek, and there was no letter in the alphabet to represent it. In ancient Latin, the letter 'v' represented the sound of English 'w'. Certain archaic dialects of Greek had the 'w' sound, and wrote it with a letter known as "digamma". But both the sound and the letter disappeared before the classical period of the language.
Pi is a Greek letter for the "P" sound.
Theta for the sound of th in "thin;" delta for the sound of th in "this."
In a more earlier form of Greek, omega had a longer "o" sound whereas omicron had a shorter sound. However in modern Greek, both letters make the same "o" sound which can make spelling sometimes difficult. Majority of the times the last letter of the word will end with omega rather than omicron. Hope this helped
The Greek letter "o" is pronounced as the short "o" sound, similar to the "o" in the English word "top."
Yes, they make a sound like a siren. Hence the name "Siren".
No, but the letter Kappa has the same sound as a hard c.
The Greek letter 'ita" is written like this in Greek: H (which looks like an h in English)
You don't. The letter J does not translate to Greek, unless you use a dipthong of the letters D and Z to approximate the sound.
Mu (the sound of m. Looks like u with an extended left or M as a capital)
The 23rd letter of the Greek alphabet is Psi. It is written as Ψ in uppercase and ψ in lowercase. It represents the sound equivalent to the English "ps" in words like "psychology."
The twenty-first letter of the Greek Alphabet is phi. The letter is written as uppercase Φ, lowercase φ or ϕ and the Greek name of the letter is φι. Phi (pronounced "fie").