The (Old) 27th Letter of the English Alphabet
- Admin
- Jan 12, 2015
- 2 min read
It's true. Our modern, English alphabet, used to have 27 letters! Do you know what the 27th letter was?
et.
"Et" was the 27th letter of the alphabet. And actually, you can still find it on your keyboard!
"&"
Now most people call this character an "ampersand" or simply "and", but this character is actually a letter!
History of et
Et is the Latin word for and. It's usage can be traced back to the first century! This is where the ampersand was born. The "&" symbol was created as a ligature (combination of two letters) of the letters "e" and "t" or "et". It was considered a letter of the alphabet all the way up until the early 17th century.
It even had its own place at the end of the alphabet. The phrase "and, per se, and" was added after the letter z. This partially English/partially Latin phrase means "and, by itself, and." However, this poor phrase soon became subject to "rebracketing".
Rebracketing
Rebracketing occurs when a phrase is slurred together to form a new word. A prime example of this is the English word "Alligator". Originally, we got this word from the spanish word(s): el lagarto {meaning "the lizard"}.
We eventually slurred this word so much...
el legarto ... ellagarto ... allagarto ... alligarto ... alligator ...
that we got our word, Alligator.
Now-a-days
Now-a-days, the ampersand is a character used for aesthetic in various logos and names. Unfortunately, it no longer holds it position as the 27th letter of the English alphabet.
Fun fact: "&c" used to be the way to write "etc" or "et cetera".
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