User:Buaidh/Test1

The following three tables comprise the printable characters of the C0 Controls and Basic Latin Unicode block (from U+0000 to U+007F) with their common names and pronunciation in the Latin, English, German, French, and Spanish languages.

The Latin alphabet has evolved since the origin of the Roman Republic and its eventual integration into many modern languages. After the Roman conquest of Greece in the 1st century BCE, Latin adopted the Greek letters upsilon and zeta as the Latin letters Y and Z (highlighted in light green ), expanding the 21-letter Latin alphabet to 23 letters. The three modern letters J, U, and W added to Classical Latin to form the 26-letter Basic Latin alphabet and the modern number 0 are highlighted in light yellow. Modern letters not included in the Basic Latin alphabet are shown in gray.