It is a Umlaut - it is placed over a vowel to indicate a more central articulation
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 dot above a "j" is called a "tittle." It is a diacritical mark used in various Latin alphabet scripts to distinguish the letter from others and to aid in readability. The tittle is also found above the lowercase "i."
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.
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.
Sure, imagine placing one dot on a sheet of paper, another dot directly above the first dot, and a third dot directly below the first dot. These three dots would not be coplanar as they would form a vertical line with one dot above and one dot below the plane of the paper.