Hello, To be precise, this is the COMBINING TILDE not the character TILDE (U+007E).
Best Regards, Jonathan Rosenne -----Original Message----- From: Unicode [mailto:unicode-boun...@unicode.org] On Behalf Of Otto Stolz via Unicode Sent: Saturday, July 08, 2017 1:33 PM To: unicode@unicode.org Subject: Tilde (was: Unicode education in UK Schools) Hello, am 2017-07-07 um 17:14 Uhr hat William_J_G Overington geschrieben: > I found that the character a tilde as I now know it to be called is only used > in Portuguese. Just for the record: “Ô is used in Portuguese, Kashubian; “Ñ” is used in Galician, Spanish, Mirandese, Catalan (only for Spanish loan words), even English (for Spanish loan words), Breton (in Peurunvan spelling), Basque; “Õ” is used in Estonian, Livonian (extinct since 2013); “Ȭ” is used in Livonian; “Ũ” is used in Mirandese. I have only considered European official, and regional, languages. Cheers, Otto