The squiggly symbol placed over the letter "s" in "José" is called an acute accent. It indicates that the letter "e" is pronounced with emphasis in Spanish.
A waterfall symbol on a map typically looks like a series of vertical lines depicting water flowing downward. It may also be represented by a single icon of a waterfall with water flowing over the edge.
The symbol over an "o" is called a diaeresis or umlaut. It is used to indicate that the vowel is pronounced separately from the preceding vowel, as in the word "coöperate" or "naïve."
You can use w/o. In medical shorthand without is a s with a line over it and with is a c with a line over it
It expands. Get bigger over a period of time.
The milk is boiling so it will still be very hot, and will boil over.
An equal sign with a squiggly line over the top of it.
It means congruent. It is NOT 'approximately equal', which would be an equal sigh where BOTH lines are squiggly.
The dieresis is the symbol placed over a letter that is most commonly a vowel. When that letter is an i or a j, the diacritic replaces the tittle: i.
anos.(squiggly line over the n "~")
The squiggly mark over the n in spanish is called a tilde.
nono which translates as soppy in English. (the 2 N's have the squiggly upside down s on top I couldn't put the squiggly bit because i have an English keyboard))
It's called a tilde.
They weren't originally this shape but have simply evolved over time to be this way.
ewan??
A waterfall symbol on a map typically looks like a series of vertical lines depicting water flowing downward. It may also be represented by a single icon of a waterfall with water flowing over the edge.
Less than: x<y Greater than: x>y Equal to: x=y There is also less than or equal to, which is the less than symbol with a line over it, as well as greater than or equal to, which is the greater than symbol with a line over it. Not equal to is an equal sign with a slash. About equal to is an equal sign but with squiggly lines intead of straight.
Two lines with a squiggly line over it. It is the lower case Greek letter 'p' and looks a bit like π It can be inserted in many programs (when using Windows) by holding down the 'Alt' key and typing 227 π