ß

ẞ ß
Usage
Writing systemLatin script
TypeAlphabetic
Language of originEarly New High German
Sound values[s]
In UnicodeU+1E9E, U+00DF
History
Development
,
Time period~1300s to present
DescendantsNone
SistersNone
Transliterationsss, sz
Other
Associated graphsss, sz
Writing directionLeft-to-right
Variant forms of Eszett (from top-left to bottom-right): Cambria (2004), Lucida Sans (1985), Theuerdank blackletter (1933, based on a 1517 type), handwritten Kurrent (1865)

In German orthography, the letter ß, called Eszett (IPA: [ɛsˈtsɛt], S-Z) or scharfes S (IPA: [ˌʃaʁfəs ˈʔɛs], "sharp S"), represents the /s/ phoneme in Standard German when following long vowels and diphthongs. The letter-name Eszett combines the names of the letters of s (Es) and z (Zett) in German. The character's Unicode names in English are double s, sharp s and eszett. The Eszett letter is currently used only in German, and can be typographically replaced with the double-s digraph ss if the ß-character is unavailable. In the 20th century, the ß-character was replaced with ss in the spelling of Swiss Standard German (Switzerland and Liechtenstein), while remaining Standard German spelling in other varieties of the German language.

The letter originated as the sz digraph used in late medieval and early modern German orthography, represented as a ligature of ſ (long s) and ʒ (tailed z) in blackletter typefaces, yielding ſʒ. This developed from an earlier usage of z in Old and Middle High German to represent a sibilant that did not sound the same as s; when the difference between the two sounds was lost in the 13th century, the two symbols came to be combined as sz in some situations.

Traditionally, ß did not have a capital form, although some type designers introduced de facto capitalized variants. In 2017, the Council for German Orthography officially adopted a capital, , as an acceptable variant in German orthography, ending a long orthographic debate. Since 2024 the capital (ligature) has been preferred over SS (two letters).

Lowercase ß was encoded by ECMA-94 (1985) at position 223 (hexadecimal DF), inherited by Latin-1 and Unicode (U+00DF ß LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S). The HTML entity ß was introduced with HTML 2.0 (1995). The capital was encoded by Unicode in 2008 at (U+1E9E LATIN CAPITAL LETTER SHARP S).