Ͷ

Etymology 1
A glyph development from the letter  in several  alphabets, wherein  denoted the archaic phoneme, which was elsewhere denoted by. In the dialect,  gained the  ; consequently,  was adopted to mark the distinction (albeit inconsistently), with  denoting the original  and  denoting the novel phone.

Etymology 2
An alteration of ; it occurred in the dialect of  in, wherein it is believed that it denoted a  of the Proto-Greek phoneme *, intermediate between it and the later Arcadocypriot.

Etymology 3
Applied due to the resemblance of the glyph to the Unicode reference glyph shared by the Pamphylian digamma and Arcadocypriot tsan.