m

mDevelopment of the letter m. The letter probably started as a picture sign of water, as in Egyptian hieroglyphic writing (1) and in a very early Semitic writing that was used about 1500 bce on the Sinai Peninsula (2). About 1000 bce, in Byblos and other Phoenician and Canaanite centers, the sign was given a linear form with a tail (3), the source of all later forms. In the Semitic languages, the sign was called mem, meaning “water.” The Greeks gave the sign a symmetrical, balanced form without the tail (4). They named it mu. The Romans took the sign without change into Latin. From Latin the capital letter M came unchanged into English.

m, thirteenth letter of the alphabet. It corresponds to the Semitic mem and to the Greek mu (Μ). The Semitic form may derive from an earlier sign representing waves of water. Early Greek forms from Thera, Attica, and Corinth closely resemble the early North Semitic rendering. The Lydian alphabet also has a similar form. These forms differ only in the direction of the writing. The Etruscan form is similar but has an additional stroke. Since this form is rare in Etruscan, the Latin form may have been borrowed directly from the Chalcidian.

Curious forms occur in the various Italic alphabets, including Umbrian, Oscan, and Faliscan. The rounded form appears in the uncial writing of the 5th or 6th century. The cursive hands of the 6th century show a different rounded form that is based on the Carolingian. The modern minuscule does not differ essentially from the majuscule letter.

The sound represented by the letter has been from the beginning the labial nasal. Of all sounds, the nasals are least liable to change, a fact that is reflected in the consistent history of the letter.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Michael Ray.