Bar (diacritic)

◌̵
Stroke, bar
◌̶ ◌̷ ◌̸ ◌⃒ ◌⃓
In Unicode
  • U+0335 ◌̵ COMBINING SHORT STROKE OVERLAY
  • U+0336 ◌̶ COMBINING LONG STROKE OVERLAY
  • U+0337 ◌̷ COMBINING SHORT SOLIDUS OVERLAY
  • U+0338 ◌̸ COMBINING LONG SOLIDUS OVERLAY
  • U+20D2 ◌⃒ COMBINING LONG VERTICAL LINE OVERLAY
  • U+20D3 ◌⃓ COMBINING SHORT VERTICAL LINE OVERLAY

A bar or stroke is a modification consisting of a line drawn through a grapheme. It may be used as a diacritic to derive new letters from old ones, or simply as an addition to make a grapheme more distinct from others. It can take the form of a vertical bar, slash, or crossbar.

A stroke is sometimes drawn through the numerals 7 (horizontal overbar) and 0 (overstruck foreslash), to make them more distinguishable from the number 1 and the letter O, respectively. (In some typefaces, one or other or both of these characters are designed in these styles; they are not produced by overstrike or by combining diacritic. The normal way in most of Europe to write the number seven is with a bar. )

In medieval English scribal abbreviations, a stroke or bar was used to indicate abbreviation. For example, the pound sign ⟨£⟩, is (a blackletter ⟨L⟩), with a cross bar.

For the specific usages of various letters with bars and strokes, see their individual articles.