Citations:o caudata


 * 1948, Language: Journal of the Linguistic Society of America,page 46:
 * Seip has [... pointed] out that the e caudata (ę) was common in both Latin and English manuscripts of the period. An o caudata could easily have been formed by analogy with this character.


 * 2004, O E Haugen, Parallel views: Multi-level encoding of medieval Nordic primary sources, in Literary and linguistic computing:
 * amount of paleographical detail, such as the comparative height and width of the characters, hair lines, and minute allographic variation in letter forms, etc on this level is identical with that of Modern Icelandic, with the addition of the character 'o ogonek' (or ‘o caudata’),


 * 2006, Cambrian Medieval Celtic Studies, issues 51-52, page 15:
 * substituted for Old Norse o-caudata throughout this paper.