The double dot over the letter "u" is called an "umlaut" in the German language.
The dot over the "i" and "j" is called the "tittle".
The cross over the "t" is often just referred to as the cros
The dot over the letter i is called tittle.
It is called the tittle according to the Oxford Dictionary
a tittle
tittle
It is called tittle
Octothorpe
the double dot is an umlaut, and i believe the line is called macron u
it is called the title
it is called the title
A dot above a letter is known as a 'diacritic dot'. The common name for the diacritic dot above an i or a j is a 'tittle'.
A tittle.
It is called a tittle The tittle first appeared in Latin manuscripts in the 11th century, to distinguish the letter i from strokes of nearby letters. Although originally a larger mark, it was reduced to a dot when Roman-style typefaces were introduced. tittle According to Oxford Dictionaries, the dot above the letters i and j are called superscript dots.
The dot over the letter i is called a tittle.If you are trying to ask, "What is the character that has a two dots above the letter U".This is called an umlaut. The letter Ü occurs in the Hungarian, Portuguese, Catalan, Spanish alphabet, Karelian, Klingon, Turkish, Uyghur, Estonian, Azeri, Turkmen, Crimean Tatar and Tatar Latin alphabets, where it represents a close front rounded vowel ([y]). It is a distinct letter, collated separately, and not considered a simple modification of [u] or [i]. It is distinct from "UE".
Usually called an umlaut.
The dot over the lower-case "i" is called a pip.
The dot is just called superscript dots It was added to the letter i in the Middle Ages to distinguish the letter (in manuscripts) from adjacent vertical strokes in such letters as u, m, and n. J is a variant form of i which emerged at this time and subsequently became a separate letter.