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41-469: [REDACTED] Look up AA , Aa , aa , a-a , or A.A. in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. AA , Aa , Double A , or Double-A may refer to: Arts, entertainment and media [ edit ] America's Army , a 2002 computer game published by the U.S. Army Ancient Anguish , a computer game in existence since 1992 Aa! ,

82-464: A bra size AA, a width in shoe sizes AA battery size Nature [ edit ] Aa (plant) , a genus of orchid Aa (snail) , a subgenus of snail ʻAʻā or aa, a form of lava A term for "river" in German hydronymy, see Aach (toponymy) People [ edit ] Aa (surname) , a Scandinavian surname, including a list of people with this name Van der Aa (surname) ,

123-470: A Dutch surname, including a list of people with this name Aa (architect) , an architect in ancient Egypt Anthony Armstrong (writer) (1897–1972), Anglo-Canadian writer who used the pseudonym A.A. when writing for Punch Allu Arjun (born 1982), Indian actor, often abbreviated as AA in film titles Places [ edit ] Aa, Estonia , a village and beach in Estonia Aa, Indonesia ,

164-413: A J-Pop musical group Double-A (band) , stylised as AA, South Korean boy band Aa (album) , a 2016 album by Baauer AA (song) , a 2021 single by Walker Hayes Ace Attorney , a series of video games developed by Capcom. AA Films , an Indian film distribution company AA Book (disambiguation) AA, the production code for the 1966 Doctor Who serial The Savages Academy Award , in

205-569: A Minor League Baseball classification level American Association (1882–1891) , US baseball league American Association (1902–1997) , US baseball league American Association of Professional Baseball , North American baseball league Athletics Australia Amateur Athletic Union , US, since 1884 Transportation [ edit ] AA Highway , Kentucky, US Former Ann Arbor Railroad (1895–1976) , Ohio and Michigan Ann Arbor Railroad (1988) , Ohio and Michigan Former K line , New York City Subway, formerly "AA" NZR A class ,

246-632: A New Zealand locomotive class Ascend Airways Other uses [ edit ] Asian Aerospace , an airshow in Asia Associate of Arts , an academic degree European Union Association Agreement Postal abbreviation for United States armed forces in the Americas Japanese internet slang for Shift JIS art Internet slang for ASCII Art See also [ edit ] AAA (disambiguation) Grosse Aa (disambiguation) Kleine Aa (disambiguation) A Aa ,

287-525: A broad and a slender consonant, except when preceding word-final or pre-consonant ⟨ll, m, nn⟩ (e.g. cainnt /kʰaiɲtʲ/ , or pre-consonant ⟨bh, mh⟩ (e.g. aimhreit /ˈaivɾʲɪtʲ/ . In the Kernowek Standard orthography of Cornish , it represents /eː/ , mostly in loanwords from English such as paint . ⟨ aí ⟩ is used in Irish for /iː/ between

328-713: A broad and a slender consonant. ⟨ aî ⟩ is used in French for /ɛː/ , as in aînesse /ɛːnɛs/ or maître /mɛːtʁ/ . ⟨ ái ⟩ is used in Irish for /aː/ between a broad and a slender consonant. ⟨ ài ⟩ is used in Scottish Gaelic for /aː/ or sometimes /ɛː/ , between a broad and a slender consonant. ⟨ ãi ⟩ is used in Portuguese for /ɐ̃ĩ̯/ , usually spelt ⟨ãe⟩ . ⟨ am ⟩

369-483: A consonant or finally); or /bm/ (before a vowel); examples are mabm ('mother') or hebma ('this'). ⟨ bp ⟩ is used in Sandawe and romanized Thai for /p/ . ⟨bp⟩ (capital ⟨bP⟩ ) is used in Irish , as the eclipsis of ⟨p⟩ , to represent /bˠ/ (beside ⟨a, o, u⟩ ) and /bʲ/ (beside ⟨e, i⟩ ). ⟨ bv ⟩

410-665: A disease Arachidonic acid , a polyunsaturated fatty acid Advanced Architecture, later Amiga Advanced Graphics Architecture Atlas Autocode , a computer programming language AA, Audible.com file format Authoritative Answer bit, in DNS, a flag for a query answer AA postulate of Euclidean geometry Anti-aircraft , in military use Attoampere (aA), 10 Ampere , a unit of electric current AA tree in computer science Abbreviation for azidoazide azide Anna's Archive , search engine for shadow libraries Sports [ edit ] Double-A (baseball) or Class AA,

451-477: A film Automobile Association (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title AA . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=AA&oldid=1241213273 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

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492-424: A geminated /tʃ/ , as in lacci /ˈlat.tʃi/ . In Piedmontese and Lombard , ⟨cc⟩ represents the /tʃ/ sound at the end of a word. In Hadza it is the glottalized click /ᵑǀˀ/ . In English crip slang, ⟨cc⟩ can sometimes replace the letters ⟨ck⟩ or ⟨ct⟩ at the ends of words, such as with thicc , protecc , succ and fucc . ⟨ cg ⟩

533-580: A populated place in the South Sulawesi province of Indonesia Albania , LOC MARC code Ann Arbor , a city in Michigan, United States of America Anne Arundel County , a county in Maryland, United States of America Antarctica , WMO country code Aruba , FIPS country code Rivers [ edit ] Belgium [ edit ] Aa (Nete) , in the province of Antwerp, tributary of

574-683: A rebel group Audio-Animatronics , used at Disney Parks Academia de Artes , Mexico Former US Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers Architectural Association School of Architecture , London, United Kingdom Astrological Association of Great Britain , London, UK Auswärtiges Amt , the Foreign Office of Germany Danish Association of Architects ( Akademisk Arkitektforening ) The AA , UK motoring organization AA Ireland , an Irish automotive services company AA Motoring Trust, merged into IAM Motoring Trust Philosophy and religion [ edit ] A∴A∴ ,

615-605: A river in Westerwolde , Groningen Switzerland [ edit ] Aabach (Aare) , a tributary of the Aare, in Aargau canton Aabach (Greifensee) or Ustermer Aa, in canton of Zürich Aabach (Obersee) , a tributary of Obersee (Zürichsee), in canton of St. Gallen Aabach (Seetal) , in the cantons of Lucerne and Aargau Chli Aa (Sempachersee) , a tributary of Lake Sempach in the canton of Lucerne Engelberger Aa , in

656-611: A spiritual organization created in 1907 by Aleister Crowley Abhisamayalankara , or Abhisamaya-alaṅkāra, a Mahayana Buddhist text Augustinians of the Assumption , a congregation of Catholic religious (priests and brothers) Statue of A'a from Rurutu , a wooden fertility-god sculpture from the Pacific island of Rurutu " A is A ", an expression of the law of identity: each thing is identical with itself Iah , an ancient moon deity AA or A.A. ( After Adam ), year notation in

697-655: A vowel). In Breton it represents /ɑ̃n/ . ⟨ aⁿ ⟩ is used in Hokkien Pe̍h-ōe-jī for /ã/ . ⟨ ân ⟩ is used in Portuguese for a stressed /ɐ̃/ before a consonant. ⟨ än ⟩ is used in Tibetan Pinyin for /ɛ̃/ . It is alternately written ⟨ ain ⟩ . ⟨ ån ⟩ is used in Walloon , for the nasal vowel /ɔ̃/ . ⟨ aŋ ⟩

738-659: Is alphabetised with ⟨a⟩ , not at the end of the alphabet, as it would be in Danish , Norwegian and Swedish . Substantially-modified letters, such as ⟨ ſ ⟩ (a variant of ⟨s⟩ ) and ⟨ɔ⟩ (based on ⟨o⟩ ), are placed at the end. Capitalisation only involves the first letter ( ⟨ch⟩ becomes ⟨Ch⟩ ) unless otherwise stated ( ⟨ij⟩ becomes ⟨IJ⟩ in Dutch , and digraphs marking eclipsis in Irish , are capitalised on

779-500: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages AA">AA The requested page title contains unsupported characters : ">". Return to Main Page . List of Latin-script digraphs#A This is a list of digraphs used in various Latin alphabets . In the list, letters with diacritics are arranged in alphabetical order according to their base, e.g. ⟨ å ⟩

820-485: Is used for /aː/ , contrasting with ⟨a⟩ /ɐ/ . ⟨ ae ⟩ is used in Irish for /eː/ between two "broad" ( velarized ) consonants, e.g. Gael /ɡeːlˠ/ "a Gael ". ⟨ ãe ⟩ is used in Portuguese for /ɐ̃ĩ̯/ . ⟨ ah ⟩ is used in Taa for breathy or murmured /a̤/ . In German and English it typically represents a long vowel /ɑː/ . ⟨ ai ⟩

861-470: Is used for the fortis sound /p͈/ , otherwise spelled ⟨pp⟩ ; e.g. hobbang . In Hadza it represents the ejective /pʼ/ . In several African languages it is implosive /ɓ/ . In Cypriot Arabic it is /bʱ/ . ⟨ bd ⟩ is used in English for /d/ in a few words of Greek origin, such as bdellatomy . When not initial, it represents /bd/ , as in abdicate . ⟨ bf ⟩

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902-527: Is used in Bavarian and several African languages for the /b̪͡v/ . ⟨ bh ⟩ is used in transcriptions of Indo-Aryan languages for a murmured voiced bilabial plosive ( /bʱ/ ), and for equivalent sounds in other languages. In Juǀʼhoan , it's used for the similar prevoiced aspirated plosive /b͡pʰ/ . It is used in Irish to represent /w/ (beside ⟨a, o, u⟩ ) and /vʲ/ (beside ⟨e, i⟩ ), word-initially it marks

943-536: Is used in German for the diphthong /ɔɪ/ in declension of native words with ⟨au⟩ ; elsewhere, /ɔɪ/ is written as ⟨eu⟩ . In words, mostly of Latin origin, where ⟨ä⟩ and ⟨u⟩ are separated by a syllable boundary, it represents /ɛ.ʊ/ , e.g. Matthäus (a German form for Matthew ). ⟨ aw ⟩ is used in English in ways that parallel English ⟨au⟩ , though it appears more often at

984-692: Is used in Lakhota for the nasal vowel /ã/ ⟨ ao ⟩ is used in many languages, such as Piedmontese and Mandarin Pinyin , to represent /au̯/ . In Irish , it represents /iː/ ( /eː/ in Munster ) between broad consonants. In Scottish Gaelic , it represents /ɯː/ between broad consonants. In French , it is found in a few words such as paon representing /ɑ̃/ and as paonne representing /a/ . In Malagasy , it represents /o/ . In Wymysorys , it represents /œʏ̯/ . ⟨ ão ⟩

1025-445: Is used in Portuguese for /ɐ̃ũ̯/ . ⟨ aq ⟩ is used in Taa , for the pharyngealized vowel /aˤ/ . ⟨ au ⟩ is used in English for /ɔː/ . It occasionally represents /aʊ/ , as in flautist . Other pronunciations are /æ/ or /ɑː/ (depending on dialect) in aunt and laugh , /eɪ/ in gauge , /oʊ/ in gauche and chauffeur , and /ə/ as in meerschaum and restaurant . ⟨ äu ⟩

1066-560: Is used in Taa for the glottalized or creaky-voiced vowel /a̰/ . ⟨ aa ⟩ is used in Dutch , Finnish and other languages with phonemic long vowels for /aː/ . It was formerly used in Danish and Norwegian (and still is in some proper names) for [ɔ] or [ʌ] (in Danish), until it was replaced with ⟨ å ⟩ . There is a ligature ⟨ Ꜳ ⟩ . In Cantonese romanisations such as Jyutping or Yale , it

1107-587: Is used in English for /eɪ/ . ⟨ bb ⟩ is used in Pinyin for /b/ in languages such as Yi , where ⟨b⟩ stands for /p/ . It was used in Portuguese until 1947. It had the same sound as ⟨b⟩ . Was used only for etymological purposes. In Hungarian , it represents geminated /bː/ . In English, doubling a letter indicates that the previous vowel is short (so ⟨bb⟩ represents /b/ ). In ISO romanized Korean , it

1148-405: Is used in Portuguese for /ɐ̃ũ̯/ word finally, /ɐ̃/ before a consonant, and /am/ before a vowel. In French, it represents /ɑ̃/ . ⟨ âm ⟩ is used in Portuguese for a stressed /ɐ̃/ before a consonant. ⟨ an ⟩ is used in many languages to write a nasal vowel . In Portuguese it is used for /ɐ̃/ before a consonant. In French it represents /ɑ̃/ ( /an/ before

1189-486: Is used in many languages, typically representing the diphthong /aɪ/ . In English , due to the Great Vowel Shift , it represents /eɪ/ as in pain and rain , while in unstressed syllables it may represent /ə/ , e.g. bargain and certain(ly) . In French , it represents /ɛ/ . In Irish and it represents /a/ between a broad and a slender consonant. In Scottish Gaelic , it represents /a/ or /ɛ/ between

1230-645: Is used in the General Alphabet of Cameroon Languages for the voiced labiodental affricate /b̪͡v/ . ⟨ bz ⟩ is used in Shona for a whistled sibilant cluster /bz͎/ . ⟨ cc ⟩ is used in Andean Spanish for loanwords from Quechua or Aymara with /q/ , as in Ccozcco (modern Qusqu) (' Cuzco '). In Italian , ⟨cc⟩ before a front vowel represents

1271-675: Is used in the Wu MiniDict Romanisation for dark /n/ . ⟨ ʼng ⟩ is used in the Wu MiniDict Romanisation for dark /ŋ/ . ⟨ ʼny ⟩ is used in the Wu MiniDict Romanisation for dark /ȵ/ . ⟨ ʼy ⟩ (capital ⟨ ʼY ⟩ ) is used in Bari and Hausa (in Nigeria) for /ʔʲ/ , but in Niger, Hausa ⟨ʼy⟩ is replaced with ⟨ƴ ⟩ . ⟨ aʼ ⟩

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1312-458: The Nete France [ edit ] Aa (France) Germany [ edit ] Aabach (Afte) , formerly Große Aa, North Rhine-Westphalia Aa (Möhne) , North Rhine-Westphalia Aa (Nethe) , North Rhine-Westphalia Aa (Werre) , North Rhine-Westphalia Bocholter Aa , North Rhine-Westphalia Dreierwalder Aa , North Rhine-Westphalia Kleine Aa (Aabach) , a tributary of

1353-517: The lenition of ⟨b⟩ , e.g. mo bhád /mˠə waːd̪ˠ/ "my boat", bheadh /vʲɛx/ "would be". In Scottish Gaelic , it represents /v/ , or in a few contexts as /w/~/u/ between a broad vowel and a broad consonant or between two broad vowels, as in labhair /l̪ˠau.ɪɾʲ/ . In the orthography used in Guinea before 1985 , ⟨bh⟩ was used in Pular (a Fula language ) for

1394-546: The voiced bilabial implosive /ɓ/ , whereas in Xhosa , Zulu , and Shona , ⟨b⟩ represents the implosive and ⟨bh⟩ represents the plosive /b/ . In some orthographies of Dan , ⟨b⟩ is /b/ and ⟨bh⟩ is /ɓ/ . ⟨ bm ⟩ is used in Cornish for an optionally pre-occluded /m/ ; that is, it represents either /m/ or /mː/ (in any position); /ᵇm/ (before

1435-905: The Aabach in North Rhine-Westphalia Große Aa , a tributary of the Ems in Lower Saxony Große Aa (Aabach) , a tributary of the Aabach in North Rhine-Westphalia Münstersche Aa , North Rhine-Westphalia Schaler Aa , Lower Saxony and North Rhine-Westphalia Speller Aa , Lower Saxony and North Rhine-Westphalia Steinfurter Aa , North Rhine-Westphalia Netherlands [ edit ] Aa (Meuse) , North Brabant Aa of Weerijs , North Brabant Drentsche Aa , Drenthe and Groningen Ruiten Aa  [ nl ] ,

1476-503: The Mandaean calendar Language [ edit ] aa, Latin-script digraph used in the orthographies of Dutch, Finnish and other languages aa, representation of letter Å in several Scandinavian languages aa, a romanization of Arabic letter alif ⟨ا⟩ Ꜳ , an orthographic ligature Afar language (ISO 639-1 language code aa) Aa (Bengali) , a Bengali letter Measurements [ edit ] AA,

1517-483: The cantons of Obwalden and Nidwalden Gross Aa (Sempachersee) , a tributary of Lake Sempach in the canton of Lucerne Mönchaltorfer Aa , a tributary of Greifensee in canton of Zürich Sarner Aa (river) , Obwalden, tributary of Lake Lucerne Latvia [ edit ] Gauja , Latvia, formerly known as Livländische Aa Lielupe , Latvia, formerly known as Kurländische Aa Science and technology [ edit ] AA amyloidosis Aplastic anemia ,

1558-470: The end of a word. In Cornish , it represents /aʊ/ or /æʊ/ . In Welsh , it represents /au/ . ⟨ ay ⟩ is used in English in ways that parallel ⟨ai⟩ , though it appears more often at the end of a word. In French, it represents /ɛj/ before a vowel (as in ayant ) and /ɛ.i/ before a consonant (as in pays ). In Cornish , it represents /aɪ/ , /əɪ/ , /ɛː/ , or /eː/ . ⟨ a_e ⟩ (a split digraph )

1599-456: The film industry Brands, organizations and enterprises [ edit ] Alcoholics Anonymous , support organisation A. A. Arms , a defunct firearms manufacturer Aerolíneas Argentinas , an Argentine airline Air Asia , an airline Air Austral airline, former logo Alcoa , a US aluminum producer, stock symbol American Airlines , IATA code Anadolu Agency , press agency, Turkey Arakan Army , Rakhine State, Myanmar,

1640-460: The second letter, i.e. ⟨mb⟩ becomes ⟨mB⟩ ). ⟨ ʼb ⟩ (capital ⟨ ʼB ⟩ ) is used in Bari for /ɓ/ . ⟨ ʼd ⟩ (capital ⟨ ʼD ⟩ ) is used in Bari for /ɗ/ . ⟨ ʼm ⟩ is used in the Wu MiniDict Romanisation for dark or yin tone /m/ . It is also often written as /ʔm/ . ⟨ ʼn ⟩

1681-702: Was used for [ddʒ] or [gg] in Old English ( ecg in Old English sounded like 'edge' in Modern English, while frocga sounded like 'froga'), where both are long consonants . It is used for the click /ǀχ/ in Naro , and in the Tindall orthography of Khoekhoe for the voiceless dental click /ǀ/ . ⟨ ch ⟩ is used in several languages. In English, it can represent /tʃ/ , /k/ , /ʃ/ , /x/ or /h/ . See article. ⟨ çh ⟩

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