Letras Gregas Α Β Γ - Símbolos Copiar e Colar | 53+
Copie e cole 53+ letras gregas α β γ δ ε ζ η θ, símbolos grátis. Perfeitos para matemática, ciências no WhatsApp e Instagram.
Referência de símbolos53
Alpha Emoji Symbol
Beta Emoji Symbol
Gamma Emoji Symbol
Delta Emoji Symbol
Epsilon Emoji Symbol
Zeta Emoji Symbol
Eta Emoji Symbol
Theta Emoji Symbol
Iota Emoji Symbol
Kappa Emoji Symbol
Lambda Emoji Symbol
Mu Emoji Symbol
Nu Emoji Symbol
Xi Emoji Symbol
Omicron Emoji Symbol
Pi Emoji Symbol
Rho Emoji Symbol
Sigma Emoji Symbol
Tau Emoji Symbol
Upsilon Emoji Symbol
Phi Emoji Symbol
Chi Emoji Symbol
Psi Emoji Symbol
Omega Emoji Symbol
Alpha Emoji Symbol
Beta Emoji Symbol
Gamma Emoji Symbol
Delta Emoji Symbol
Epsilon Emoji Symbol
Zeta Emoji Symbol
Eta Emoji Symbol
Theta Emoji Symbol
Iota Emoji Symbol
Kappa Emoji Symbol
Lambda Emoji Symbol
Mu Emoji Symbol
Nu Emoji Symbol
Xi Emoji Symbol
Omicron Emoji Symbol
Pi Emoji Symbol
Rho Emoji Symbol
Sigma Emoji Symbol
Final Sigma Emoji Symbol
Tau Emoji Symbol
Upsilon Emoji Symbol
Phi Emoji Symbol
Chi Emoji Symbol
Psi Emoji Symbol
Omega Emoji Symbol
Greek Small Letter Sampi Emoji Symbol
Greek Small Letter Omicron With Dasia And Varia Emoji Symbol
Greek Small Letter Upsilon With Dasia And Oxia Emoji Symbol
Greek Small Letter Omega With Dasia And Varia Emoji Symbol
Copy and paste Greek letters including α β γ δ ε Σ Ω π Φ Ψ and more. Click any letter to copy instantly. Essential for math equations, science papers, fraternity/sorority names, physics formulas, and engineering notation.
💡Pro Tips
- •Learn the 12 most common Greek letters for your field first — knowing α, β, γ, δ, σ, Σ, π, μ, λ, θ, ω, and Φ covers the vast majority of STEM notation needs
- •In LaTeX, use \alpha not the Unicode character α if you need cross-compiler compatibility — pdfLaTeX does not support Unicode input without additional packages
- •For fraternity and sorority social media, copy Greek letters from a reference source rather than using lookalike Latin characters — A and Α look similar but are different Unicode code points that affect searchability
- •When the same Greek letter has different meanings across disciplines (μ = micro prefix in engineering, mean in statistics, friction in mechanics), always define your usage on first mention in cross-disciplinary content
- •Use MathJax or KaTeX for rendering Greek letters in mathematical equations on websites — these libraries handle spacing, sizing, and italic conventions correctly unlike plain Unicode characters
- •Keep a Greek letter cheat sheet bookmarked or use a clipboard manager to store frequently used characters — retyping from Alt codes or character maps every time significantly slows technical writing workflows
- •In accessibility terms, Greek letters read poorly with screen readers in equation contexts — pair complex equations with descriptive text or MathML for inclusive content
- •Φ (phi) and φ (phi lowercase) represent different things in many contexts — Φ is often used for the golden ratio and statistical distribution functions, φ for angles and phase — verify your discipline's convention before publishing
🔧How to Use
Methods for inputting symbols on different devices and platforms
🪟How to Type Greek Letters on Windows
- 1Use Alt codes to type Greek letters: hold Alt and type the numeric code on the numpad, e.g., Alt+224 for α (alpha) or Alt+225 for β (beta).
- 2Enable the Greek keyboard layout in Settings > Time & Language > Language to type Greek letters directly from your keyboard.
- 3Open the Character Map app (charmap.exe), select a font, and filter by "Greek" to browse and copy Greek letters and symbols.
- 4In Microsoft Word, use Insert > Symbol > More Symbols and select "Greek and Coptic" from the Unicode subset dropdown.
- 5Copy Greek letters directly from this page and paste them into any Windows application using Ctrl + V.
💡 Tip: The easiest method is to copy symbols directly from this page to your clipboard, then paste them wherever needed.
❓Frequently Asked Questions - Greek Letters Emoji Symbols Copy And Paste
Click on questions to view detailed answers
The most frequently used are: π (pi) for the circle constant 3.14159..., α (alpha) for angles and significance levels, β (beta) for regression coefficients and angles, σ (sigma) for standard deviation, Σ (capital sigma) for summation, δ (delta) for small changes, Δ (capital delta) for differences, θ (theta) for angles, λ (lambda) for wavelength and eigenvalues, μ (mu) for population mean and micro- prefix, ω (omega) for angular frequency, and Ω (capital omega) for electrical resistance.
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