Že or Zhe (ژ) used to represent the phoneme /ʒ/, is a letter in the Persian alphabet, based on zayn (ز) with two additional diacritic dots. It is one of the four letters that the Persian alphabet adds to the original Arabic script, others being چ ,پ and گ.

It is found with this value in other Arabic-derived scripts. It is used in Pashto, Kurdish, other Iranian languages, Uyghur, Ottoman Turkish (j in the modern Turkish alphabet), Azerbaijani and Urdu, but not in Arabic.

In Kashmiri , this letter is called "tse" and represents the phoneme [t͡s].

In most of the Levant and Northwestern Africa, the letter ج ǧīm is used for /ʒ/.

Position in word Isolated Final Medial Initial
Glyph form:
(Help)
ژ ـژ ـژ ژ

Character encodings

Character information
Previewژ
Unicode name PERSIAN LETTER JEH
Encodingsdecimalhex
Unicode1688U+0698
UTF-8218 152DA 98
Numeric character referenceژژ

In other scripts

Devanagari

In Devanagari the letters झ़ and श़ (with a nuqta) are used to represent the sound of /ʒ/, e.g. टेलीविझ़न/टेलीविश़न ṭēlivižan "television". The letter corresponds to the Urdu Perso-Arabic ژ.

Bengali

In Bengali the sound of /ʒ/ may be represented as জ়়, i.e. the letter Ja with two dots.

Cyrillic

The letter ж, common in some Slavic languages, has an equivalent sound to the "s" in "television" e.g. Zharkov (Russian Cyrillic: Жарков).

See also

References


    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.