| P | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| P p | |||
| Usage | |||
| Writing system | Latin script | ||
| Type | Alphabetic and logographic | ||
| Language of origin | Latin language | ||
| Sound values | [p][pʰ][(p)f][pʼ][b]/piː/ | ||
| In Unicode | U+0050, U+0070 | ||
| Alphabetical position | 16 | ||
| History | |||
| Development |
| ||
| Time period | c. 700 BCE to present | ||
| Descendants | • Ᵽ • ₱ • ℘ • ⅌ • ℗ • ♇ • ꟼ • ¶ | ||
| Sisters | Π πⲠПף פ פּفܦࠐ𐎔በጰፐՊպप𐍀པ | ||
| Other | |||
| Associated graphs | p(x), ph | ||
| Writing direction | Left-to-right | ||
| ISO basicLatin alphabet |
|---|
| AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHhIiJjKkLlMmNnOoPpQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz |
P, or p, is the sixteenth letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. Its name in English is pee (pronounced /ˈpiː/ⓘ), plural pees.[1]
The Semitic Pê (mouth), as well as the Greek Π or π (Pi), and the Etruscan and Latin letters that developed from the former alphabet all symbolized /p/, a voiceless bilabial plosive.
| Egyptian | Proto-Sinaitic | Proto-Canaanitepʿit | Phoenician Pe | Western GreekPi | Etruscan P | LatinP | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Orthography | Phonemes |
|---|---|
| Standard Chinese (Pinyin) | /pʰ/ |
| English | /p/, silent |
| French | /p/, silent |
| German | /p/ |
| Portuguese | /p/ |
| Spanish | /p/ |
| Turkish | /p/ |

In English orthography, ⟨p⟩ represents the sound /p/.
A common digraph in English is ⟨ph⟩, which represents the sound /f/, and can be used to transliterate ⟨φ⟩phi in loanwords from Greek. In German, the digraph ⟨pf⟩ is common, representing a labial affricate/pf/.
Most English words beginning with ⟨p⟩ are of foreign origin, primarily French, Latin and Greek; these languages preserve the Proto-Indo-European initial *p. Native English cognates of such words often start with ⟨f⟩, since English is a Germanic language and thus has undergone Grimm's law; a native English word with an initial /p/ would reflect Proto-Indo-European initial *b, which is so rare that its existence as a phoneme is disputed. However, native English words with non-initial ⟨p⟩ are quite common; such words can come from either Kluge's law or the consonant cluster /sp/ (PIE: *p has been preserved after s).
P is the eighth least frequently used letter in the English language.
In most European languages, ⟨p⟩ represents the sound /p/.
In the International Phonetic Alphabet, ⟨p⟩ is used to represent the voiceless bilabial plosive.
The Latin letter P represents the same sound as the Greek letter Pi, but it looks like the Greek letter Rho.
| NATO phonetic | Morse code |
| Papa | ⓘ |
| Signal flag | Flag semaphore | American manual alphabet (ASLfingerspelling) | British manual alphabet (BSLfingerspelling) | Unified English Braille |