The spiritus asper ("rough breathing") or dasy pneuma (Greek: dasu, δασύ) is a diacritical mark used in Greek. It indicates an initial aspiration: in other words that the word began with an [h] sound in in Ancient Greek. It is written as on top of or to the left of an initial vowel (the second vowel of a pair comprising a diphthong), and also on an initial rho or the second of a pair of rhos. It takes the form of an opening half moon or an opening single quotation mark:
ἁ- ἑ- ἡ- ἱ- ὁ- ὑ- ὡ- ῥ-;
Ἁ- Ἑ- Ἡ- Ἱ- Ὁ- Ὑ- Ὡ- Ῥ-.
The only situations when it can be written inside a word are :
when it represents a coronis resulting from a crasis implying a vowel bearing a spiritus asper.
The spiritus asper merely notes the presence of an initial consonant [h], which cannot be written otherwise when it is not initial: thus ὕμνος stands for humnos, "hymn", and ῥήτωρ for hrêtôr (or rhêtôr), "orator".
When a word begins by an initial grapheme which is a vowel not preceded by an [h], the spiritus lenis ("soft breathing") is employed.
It is part of the traditional polytonic orthography for Greek, but has been dropped in the modern monotonic orthography as the [h] sound has disappeared from Modern Greek. The origin of the sign is thought to be the left-hand half ( ├ ) of the letter H, which was used in some Greek dialects as an [h] while in others it was used for the vowel eta.
rough or smooth used as a call when spinning a racket in a game of tennis or squash to decide which player should serve first or choose the end to serve from
Rough is chiefly used as an adjective, meaning "coarse," "bumpy," "harsh," or "approximate," as in a rough surface, a rough flight, rough treatment, a rough draft.
Ruff is a noun denoting a stiff pleated collar worn in the 16th and 17th centuries, or a bird with neck feathers resembling such a collar.