If the vowel is written as a digraph, accent is put on both parts of the digraph.
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When stated without any qualification, a digraph is usually assumed to be simple.
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This digraph is considered a single letter in Spanish orthography, called elle.
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A digraph with weighted edges in the context of graph theory is called a network.
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In the case of a diphthong or a digraph, the second vowel takes the diacritics.
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A strong orientation is an orientation that produces a strongly connected digraph.
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The double capital IJ is not a double capital at all but a Dutch specific digraph.
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Both the horizontal and the vertical digraph were borrowed from the Greek alphabet.
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The Macedonian digraph Dz, like in Polish and Hungarian represents a single phoneme.
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More examples
Two successive letters (especially two letters used to represent a single sound: `sh' in `shoe')
In computer programming, digraphs and trigraphs are sequences of two and three characters respectively which are interpreted as one character by the programming language.
A directed graph or digraph is a pair (sometimes) of: * a set V, whose elements are called vertices or nodes, * a set A of ordered pairs of vertices, called arcs, directed edges, or arrows (and sometimes simply edges with the corresponding set named E instead of A).
A digraph or digram (from the Greek: u03B4u03AFu03C2 du00EDs, "double" and u03B3u03C1u03ACu03C6u03C9 gru00E1phu014D, "to write") is a pair of characters used in the orthography of a language to write either a single phoneme (distinct sound), or a sequence of phonemes that does not correspond to the normal values of the two characters combined.
This is a list of digraphs used in various Latin alphabets. Capitalization involves only the first letter (ch becomes Ch) unless otherwise stated (ij becomes IJ).
A directed graph
(digraphs) Two letters that represent one speech sound, such as ch for /ch/ in chin or ea for /e/ in bread.
(Digraphs) A plaintext character pairing technique that prevents frequency analysis of commonly occurring pairs such as 'qu'. Note that trigraphs (three characters at a time) is an extension of the theme.
(Digraphs) Two consonants which create one sound. Example: ch, gh, sh, th, wh