C with stroke
Letter of the Latin alphabet
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ȼ (minuscule: ȼ) is a letter of the Latin alphabet, formed from C with the addition of a stroke through the letter. Its minuscule form represents the sound [ts] (ts as in cats) in certain phonetic transcription systems for the indigenous languages of Mexico,[1] and the Saanich alphabet uses its majuscule form (the alphabet is caseless) for [kʷ] (qu as in quilt),[2] and in Unifon, a phonemic transcription for American English; where it represents /tʃ/.

Biology
Use on computers
Ȼ was added to Unicode 4.1 in 2005, in the Latin Extended-B block.[4] It did previously not exist in character sets, and consequently, few fonts can display it. The cent sign is often substituted for it instead.
| Preview | Ȼ | ȼ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unicode name | LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH STROKE | LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH STROKE | ||
| Encodings | decimal | hex | dec | hex |
| Unicode | 571 | U+023B | 572 | U+023C |
| UTF-8 | 200 187 | C8 BB | 200 188 | C8 BC |
| Numeric character reference | Ȼ | Ȼ | ȼ | ȼ |
See also
- ¢ the symbol for cent
- ₵, the symbol for the Ghanaian cedi
- ₡, the symbol for the Salvadoran and Costa Rican colón