- Ž
The grapheme Ž (minuscule: ž) is formed from Latin
Z with the addition ofháček . It is used in various contexts, usually denoting the voiced postalveolar fricative IPA|/ʒ/, includingphonetic transcription . This sound is similar to English "g" in "genre" or Portuguese and French "j".Apart from Estonian and Turkmen, Ž is the final letter of most alphabets.
Origin
The symbol originates with the 15th century
Czech alphabet as introduced by the reforms ofJan Hus . It was also used for the closely relatedSlovak language . From Czech, it was adopted into theCroatian alphabet byLjudevit Gaj in 1830, and then into Slovenian and Bosnian alphabets.Uses
Slavic languages It is the 42nd letter of the Czech, the 46th letter of Slovak, the 25th letter of the
Slovenian alphabet , the 30th letter of the Croatian and Bosnian scripts. It is also used in bothSorbian languages .In addition, the character is typically used as a
transliteration ofCyrillic Ж in Serbian (30th position), Macedonian (in 31st position), occasionally in Russian, Ukrainian, and Belarusian and even less freqently in Bulgarian.For most languages it represents voiced postalveolar fricative IPA|/ʒ/ except in Russian transliterations of Ж where it represents
voiced retroflex fricative IPA|/ʐ/.Baltic languages It is the 32nd letter of the Lithuanian and 33rd letter of the Latvian alphabets.
Finno-Ugric languages It is the 19th letter of the Estonian and the 29th letter of the
Northern Sami alphabet. It also features occasionally in Finnish but is not part of the regular alphabet.Other languages
It is the 13th letter of the Turkmen and Laz alphabets. In Turkmen it is pronounced IPA|/ʤ/.
ee also
*
Ż
*Rz (digraph)
*Ź References
*cite book |last=Pullum |first=Geoffrey K. |authorlink=Geoffrey K. Pullum |coauthors=Ladusaw, William A. |year=1996 |title=Phonetic Symbol Guide |publisher=University of Chicago Press |pages=203
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