p

pThe letter p is of uncertain origin. Picture signs of the human mouth are found in Egyptian hieroglyphic writing (1) and perhaps also in a very early Semitic writing used about 1500 bce on the Sinai Peninsula (2). They hardly resemble the form of the p sign which was developed about 1000 bce in Byblos and other Phoenician and Canaanite centres (3). From it all later forms are derived. In the Semitic languages the sign was called pe, meaning “mouth.” The Greeks renamed the Semitic sign pi (Π) and turned the letter around to suit the left-to-right direction of their writing. They used both a curved and an angular form of the sign (4). Later the Greeks gave the angular sign more symmetry by lengthening the right-stroke tail (5). The Romans closed the Greek curved form into a loop (6). From the Latin the shape of the capital letter P came unchanged into English.The English small handwritten p is a copy of the capital.

p, sixteenth letter of the alphabet. Throughout its known history it has represented the unvoiced labial stop. It corresponds to the Semitic pe, perhaps deriving from an earlier sign for "mouth." The Greeks renamed this form pi (Π).

A rounded form occurred in the early Greek inscriptions from the island of Thera. In the Italic alphabets the form varied strangely. The standard rounded form in the Latin alphabet was evidently borrowed from the Etruscan, but the colonial Latin alphabet of the 3rd century bce also shows an angular form resembling the Chalcidic. The Umbrian alphabet had a two-stroke form that recalled the ancient Semitic, and Faliscan had a rounded form that resembled a modern P flipped right-to-left. Oscan lengthened the second small vertical stroke found in the Umbrian form, and the result was similar to the Greek Π.

The minuscule letter resembles the majuscule, the chief difference being that the loop is brought down to the level of the line of writing and the vertical stroke is extended below the line. The English initial p is slightly aspirated—that is, it is accompanied by a slight puff of breath—in contrast to the unaspirated p of French, for example. In English, as in French and German, the letter is used in combination with h in words of Greek origin to denote the unvoiced labiodental spirant expressed in other words by the letter f—e.g., philosophy, phonetics, and graphic. Initial p is silent in the combinations ps and pt in such Greek-derived words as psychology and pterodactyl.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Michael Ray.