Fita


Fita is a letter of the Early Cyrillic alphabet. The shape and the name of the letter are derived from the Greek letter theta. In the ISO 9 system, Ѳ is romanized using F grave accent.
In the Cyrillic numeral system, Fita has a value of 9.

Shape

In traditional fonts, the central line is typically about twice the width of letter's body and has serifs similar to ones on the letter T:. Sometimes the line is drawn as low as the baseline which makes the letter almost identical to Д and may cause reading difficulties.
In modern-style fonts, depending on the typeface, the center line may be either straight or waving, matching the center line of "Э" In regular text fonts, both ends of the line touch the "O". Stylish fonts may use a shorter line, either placed entirely inside the "O" or touching the circle at one point.

Usage

Old Russian and Church Slavonic

The traditional Russian name of the letter is фита́ fita. Fita was mainly used to write proper names and loanwords derived from or via Greek. Russians pronounced these names with the sound instead of , for example "Theodore" was pronounced as "Feodor".
Early texts in Russian demonstrate an increasing interchangeability of Ѳ and Ф. Some scribes preferred one of the two letters and ignored the other. There existed an orthographical system to write Ѳ in an initial position and Ф elsewhere. Since the middle of the 17th century, selection between Ѳ and Ф was re-adjusted to exactly follow the Greek origin, the system still in use in Church Slavonic orthography.

Russian

In the first variant of the Petrine Russian alphabet, the letter Ф was eliminated and Fita became the only way to represent. Later the letter Ф was restored and both letters co-existed until the 1918 spelling reform, when Fita was eliminated and replaced by the letter Ef.
Note that many Greek words with Theta were adopted in Russian with Te instead of Fita : театръ, теорема, атлетъ, пантера, фталевый, etc. Sometimes dual spelling/pronunciation existed: аѳеизмъ/атеизмъ, алгориѳмъ/алгоритмъ, каѳолическій/католическій, etc.; the variants with Fita are typically more archaic or special.

Other languages

In other languages which use the Cyrillic alphabet, Fita was pronounced and was replaced with Te. For example, the Bulgarian, Macedonian and Serbian version of Theodore is Тодор Todor or Теодор Teodor.

Romanian

Called thita, is part of the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet, which was used until about 1860.

Aleut

Fita is used in the Cyrillic version of the Aleut alphabet, typically in loanwords.

Related letters and other similar characters