d

Etymology 1
Modification of capital letter, from letter.

Letter

 * 1) The fourth letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet.

Usage notes
The letter is used in the alphabets of many languages, and in several romanization systems of non-Latin scripts to represent the voiced alveolar or dental plosive. In some languages and transcription systems, may also represent other sounds, such as  or.

Etymology 2
Lower case form of upper case roman numeral D, a standardization of or, from tally stick markings resembling a superimposed  and , from the practice of encircling each hundredth  notch.

Numeral

 * 1) cardinal number five hundred (500).

Usage notes
With a bar over the numeral, i.e., as d̅, it represents five hundred thousand (500,000).

Symbol

 * 1)  the (path-independent, exact) differential of a quantity
 * 2)  a voiced alveolar plosive.
 * 3)  -onset (prestopping / preocclusion / preplosion), -release, -coloring, or a weak, fleeting or epenthetic.
 * 4)  annual effective discount rate

Etymology 1
lower case letter, from 7th century replacement by Latin lower case of the Anglo-Saxon Futhorc letter.

Etymology 2
Abbreviations.
 * abbreviation of, the name of the corresponding Roman coin.
 * abbreviation of




 * William Shakespeare, d 1616
 * exception: 'does'
 * 1)  prefix  or 
 * exception: 'does'
 * 1)  prefix  or 

Adverb

 * Do you have the answer for 23d?
 * 1)   Used to form the perfect tenses. Used in text messages.
 * Come d.
 * Done d.
 * Done d.

Prefix

 * 1)  the prefix  or

Symbol

 * 1)  A British penny; an old penny (the modern decimal penny being abbreviated ).
 * £sd — “pounds, shillings and pence”
 * 1)  Die or dice.
 * d20 — a specialized die with twenty sides
 * 2d6 — the sum of the roll of two six-sided dice
 * 1) A penny, a measure of the size of nails.

Letter

 * 1) The 5th letter of the Standard Albanian Latin-script alphabet.
 * 2) The 7th letter of the Arvanitic Albanian Greek-script alphabet.

Article

 * 1)  the
 * 2) * 1978, Rolf Lyssey and Christa Maerker, Die Schweizermacher (transcript):
 * "gsw"

- Di nöchscht rächts. Mir fared i d’Fäldschtrass.

Article

 * 1)  the

Etymology 2
From or the differentiation symbol.

Verb

 * 1)  to differentiate

Pronunciation

 * Homophone :
 * Homophone :
 * Homophone :
 * Homophone :

Usage notes

 * Used only in loanwords except for the weak grade of t.

Etymology 2
German musical notation.

Noun

 * 1)  D note

Etymology
From. Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Particle

 * 1)  to be

Conjunction

 * 1) and

Etymology
Proposed in 1908 as part of the new Latvian spelling by the scientific commission headed by K. Mīlenbahs, which was accepted and began to be taught in schools in 1909. Prior to that, Latvian had been written in German Fraktur, and sporadically in Cyrillic.

Letter




Letter

 * 1) The ninth letter of the Lushootseed alphabet, pronounced as a voiced alveolar stop.

Etymology 2

 * abbreviation
 * abbreviation

Pronunciation
, or if devoiced

Letter

 * 1)  It is preceded by  and followed by . Its traditional name is .

Letter

 * 1) The 6th letter of the Serbo-Croatian Latin alphabet, preceded by  and followed by.

Etymology 1
From Gaj's Latin alphabet, from alphabet , from Latin , which is a modification of capital letter , from  letter. Pronunciation as is initial Slovene (phoneme plus a fill vowel) and the second pronunciation is probably taken from.

Symbol

 * 1)  Phonetic transcription of sound [].

Inflection

 * Overall more common


 * More common when with a definite adjective

Etymology 2
From with the same meaning, from, from , which is pronoun ,  'this' in. Simplification occurred due to modern vowel reduction as the final // reduced to //.

Conjunction

 * 1)  that, so that, so

Etymology 1
. Each pronunciation has a different source:
 * Filipino alphabet pronunciation is influenced by.
 * Abecedario pronunciation is from.
 * Abakada alphabet pronunciation is influenced by Baybayin character.

Usage notes

 * Sometimes switched with the letter $1$ between vowels, $⟨⟩$, or $⟨w⟩$ in a word due to lenition of to  such as  can become . Compare flapping in pronunciation of . The letter does not change if the next consonant is an  (such as  does not become ) or  (such as  does not become ).
 * Some words starting with the letter can also become $⟨y⟩$ if the last letter of the preceding word is a vowel, $⟨⟩$, or $⟨w⟩$. Examples are /, /, /, and /.
 * On all cases stated above, it is acceptable whether $⟨y⟩$ or $⟨d⟩$ is used. However, the said phenomena do not occur on proper nouns nor recent loan words.
 * In the dialect, the letter  may interchange with the letter on any position in the word even when not followed by a vowel, $⟨r⟩$, or $⟨w⟩$. (ex. / and /). Exceptions are recent loanwords, or if the next consonant after a  is  (such as in ) or  (such as in ).
 * Often switched with the letter $⟨y⟩$ on non-initial positions in early texts which may indicate ancient pronunciation of words.

Etymology 2
, homophonous to.

Letter

 * 1)  It is preceded by  and followed by .

Mutation

 * d at the beginning of words mutates to in a, to  in a  and is unchanged by , for example with the word :

Derived terms

 * The digraph $⟨r⟩$ transcribes the single consonant
 * The digraph $⟨dp⟩$ transcribes the single consonant  (found only in the inflectional clitic -dniye, and possibly actually palatalized dny )
 * The digraph $⟨dn⟩$ transcribes the single consonant

Palatalized consonants are written $⟨dm⟩$.