The Greek Alphabet

athematics, science and engineering require a large number of symbols to stand for abstract objects and parameter, so the use of Greek letters was introduced long ago to provide a collection of useful symbols to supplement the usual Roman letters.
To us these symbols may seem quite foreign, and they are difficult to become familiar with. However, at the time they were introduced, most scholars had been taught at least some Latin and Greek during their education, so the letters did not seem nearly so strange to them as they do to us. Since then, each new generation of mathematicians/scientists/engineers has just gotten used to using them.
The table below lists all of the letters in the Greek alphabet, upper-case and lower-case, with their names and pronunciations. The lower-case letters are used more often than the upper-case letters, but the latter are used often enough. In any particular textbook or paper, the way in which these symbols should be interpreted should generally be clear from the context and definitions.
The pronunciations provided are not necessarily the “correct” ones, but reflect the most common pronunciations in use in English speaking countries.

CAP / lower Name & Description
alpha ALPHA (AL-fuh) First letter of the Greek alphabet.
beta BETA (BAY-tuh)
gamma GAMMA (GAM-uh)
delta DELTA (DEL-tuh)
epsilon EPSILON (EP-sil-on) The second form of the lower case epsilon is used as the “set membership” symbol.
zeta ZETA (ZAY-tuh)
eta ETA (AY-tuh)
theta THETA (THAY-tuh)
iota IOTA (eye-OH-tuh)
kappa KAPPA (KAP-uh)
lambda LAMBDA (LAM-duh)
mu MU (MYOO)
nu NU (NOO)
xi XI (KS-EYE)
omicron OMICRON (OM-i-KRON) Rarely used because it looks like an ‘o.’
pi PI (PIE) The lower-case Pi is universally used to represent that number which is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. The upper-case Pi is used as the “product” symbol.
rho RHO (ROW)
sigma SIGMA (SIG-muh) The capital Sigma is used as the “summation” symbol.
tau TAU (TAU)
upsilon UPSILON (OOP-si-LON)
phi PHI (FEE) The two versions of lower-case Phi are used interchangeably.
chi CHI (K-EYE)
psi PSI (SIGH)
omega OMEGA (oh-MAY-guh) Last letter of the Greek alphabet.

Copyright © 1997-2002, Math Academy Online™ / Platonic Realms™. Except where otherwise prohibited, material on this site may be printed for personal classroom use without permission by students and instructors for non-profit, educational purposes only. All other reproduction in whole or in part, including electronic reproduction or redistribution, for any purpose, except by express written agreement is strictly prohibited.