The line above a letter in mathematics means a vector whose mane is the letter. So it is pronounced "vector a"
1op2*11+11p2*10
Over a long vowel it is called a breve, and over a short vowel, I believe it is called a circumflex.
A straight line has no vertex.
Displacement of a straight line is zero...
There are 180 degrees on a straight line.
The line above a vowel, also known as a macron, indicates that the vowel is pronounced as a long vowel sound. This means the vowel is held for a longer duration when speaking.
For a short vowel sound, a curved line called a breve is placed above the letter (ă).For a long vowel sound, a straight line or bar called a macron is used (ā).
The horizontal line above vowels means the letter is a long vowel.
If you look up a word in a dictionary, the dictionary will tell you the pronunciation using special symbols placed above the letters - the curved line indicates a short vowel, the straight line indicates a long vowel.
The curved line used to mark a short vowel sound is called a breve.
To elongate vowel sounds in katakana.
if there is a line above the letter in person's name that means it's a long vowel sound
The short vowel symbol is called a breve. It looks like a small curved line placed above a vowel letter.
The symbol for a long vowel is a macron (ˉ) placed above the vowel, while the symbol for a short vowel is a breve (˘) placed above the vowel. These symbols help indicate the length of the vowel sound when pronouncing words.
It would not have sides because it would be a straight line. A straight angle is 180 degrees. Anything above that is a "Reflex"
It has a long vowel sound.
A long vowel sound is marked by a bar across the top, called a macron.