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{{Short description|Cyrillic letter used for /ʁ/ in Nivkh}} | {{Short description|Cyrillic letter used for /ʁ/ in Nivkh}} | ||
Ge with stroke and hook{{Infobox Cyrillic letter| | Ge with stroke and hook (Uppercase: Ӻ, lowercase: ӻ) is a letter of a Cyrillic script. It was used in the Nivkh languages, this is in Siberia.{{Infobox Cyrillic letter| | ||
Heading=Cyrillic letter Ge with stroke and hook | Heading=Cyrillic letter Ge with stroke and hook | ||
|sound={{IPA|/ʁ/}} | |sound={{IPA|/ʁ/}} |
Revision as of 18:43, 18 December 2024
Cyrillic letter used for /ʁ/ in NivkhGe with stroke and hook (Uppercase: Ӻ, lowercase: ӻ) is a letter of a Cyrillic script. It was used in the Nivkh languages, this is in Siberia.
Cyrillic letterGe with stroke and hook (Ӻ ӻ; italics: Ӻ ӻ) is an additional letter of the Cyrillic script used for the transcription of the Nivkh languages, where it transcribes the voiced uvular fricative /ʁ/, like the r in French. It is composed of the letter ge with a horizontal bar across the middle and a descender or hook from the base. In Unicode it is called "Ghe with stroke and hook". There are two common designs: the original form with a straight descender, and a variant with a hook designed by Просвещение (Enlightenment) publishing house. The character is in Nivk language
Computing codes
Preview | Ӻ | ӻ | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Unicode name | CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER GHE WITH STROKE AND HOOK |
CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER GHE WITH STROKE AND HOOK | ||
Encodings | decimal | hex | dec | hex |
Unicode | 1274 | U+04FA | 1275 | U+04FB |
UTF-8 | 211 186 | D3 BA | 211 187 | D3 BB |
Numeric character reference | Ӻ |
Ӻ |
ӻ |
ӻ |
Notes and references
- "Nivkh (Нивхгу/Nivxgu)". Wolfram Siegel. in Omniglot: Writing systems & languages of the world. Simon Ager (ed.). http://www.omniglot.com/writing/nivkh.htm Accessed 2011-04-23.
- "Cyrillic: Range: 0400–04FF". pp 38–43 of The Unicode Standard, Version 6.0 (2010). p. 43. http://unicode.org/charts/PDF/U0400.pdf Accessed 2011-04-23.
Bibliography
- Berdnikov, A. (March 1998). "Alphabets necessary for various Cyrillic writing systems" (PDF). Cahiers GUTenberg (28–29). doi:10.5802/cg.221.
- Priest, Lorna A. (18 August 2005). Proposal to encode additional Cyrillic characters (PDF).