Že (Persian letter)
Persian letter
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Že or Zhe (ژ), used to represent the phoneme /ʒ/ ⓘ, is a letter in the Persian alphabet, based on c with two additional diacritic dots. It is one of the five letters that the Persian alphabet adds to the original Arabic script, others being Če (چ), Gaf (گ), and Pe (پ), in addition the obsolete Ve (ڤ).[1] In name and shape, it is a variant of ze. Its numerical value is 4000 (see Abjad numerals).[2]
| Že | |
|---|---|
| ژ | |
| Usage | |
| Writing system | Arabic script |
| Type | Abjad |
| Language of origin | Persian language |
| Sound values | ʒ and /t͡s/ ⓘ (in Kashmiri) |
| Alphabetical position | 14 |
| History | |
| Development | |
| Other | |
| Writing direction | Right-to-left |
It is found with this value in other Arabic-derived scripts. It is used in Pashto, Kurdish, Balochi, Pashto, Luri,, Uyghur, Ottoman Turkish (j in the modern Turkish alphabet), Arabic-script Azerbaijani, and Urdu, but not in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA).
In Kashmiri, this letter is called Tse and represents the phoneme /t͡s/ ⓘ. Its aspirated form are the letters ژھ, which represents the phoneme /t͡sʰ/ ⓘ.
In most of the Levant and the Maghreb, the letter ج ǧīm is used for /ʒ/. In Moroccan Arabic, the letter Že (ژ) is sometimes used to represent emphatic Z, such as in the word bež (بژ) meaning "children", as opposed to the normal Zay (ز), in order to differentiate between words that would look similar (for example bez (بز) meaning "forcing" or "to force").[3]
When representing this sound in transliteration of Persian into Hebrew, it is written as ז׳.
| Position in word: | Isolated | Final | Medial | Initial |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glyph form: (Help) |
ژ | ـژ | ـژ | ژ |
Character encodings
| Preview | ژ | |
|---|---|---|
| Unicode name | PERSIAN LETTER JEH | |
| Encodings | decimal | hex |
| Unicode | 1688 | U+0698 |
| UTF-8 | 218 152 | DA 98 |
| Numeric character reference | ژ | ژ |