Č

Č in upper- and lowercase

The grapheme Čč (Latin C with caron, also known as háček in Czech and mäkčeň in Slovak) is used in various contexts, usually denoting the voiceless postalveolar affricate consonant [t͡ʃ] like the English ch in the word chocolate. It is represented in Unicode as U+010C (uppercase Č) and U+010D (lowercase č).

Origin

The symbol originates with the 15th century Czech alphabet as introduced by the reforms of Jan Hus. From there, it was adopted into the Croatian alphabet by Ljudevit Gaj in 1830, and it is also used in Macedonian, Slovak,[1] Slovenian,[1] Bosnian, Latvian,[1] Lithuanian,[1] Pomak, Berber and [1] Montenegrin.

Uses

In Berber, Bosnian Latin, Croatian, Slovenian, Montenegrin Latin, Serbian Latin, Czech, Sorbian, Skolt Sami, and Lakota alphabets, it is the fourth letter of the alphabet. In Northern Sámi alphabet and the Baltic languages Lithuanian and Latvian, the letter is in fifth place. In Slovak it is sixth letter of the alphabet. It is also used in Pashto (equivalent to چ), Syriac Latin alphabet and Saanich.

It is equivalent to Ч in Cyrillic and can be used in Ukrainian, Belarusian, Russian, and Bulgarian romanisations. It features more permanently in the Latinic forms of Serbian, Montenegrin, Macedonian, as well as Belarusian.

/Č/ is also used in Americanist phonetic notation.

Software

Representation in software follows the same rules as the háček.

Unicode

CharacterČč
Unicode nameLATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CARONLATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH CARON
Encodingsdecimalhexdecimalhex
Unicode268U+010C269U+010D
UTF-8196 140C4 8C196 141C4 8D
Numeric character referenceČČčč

U+010C (uppercase Č—use Alt 268 for input) and U+010D (lowercase č—use Alt 269 for input) create this character. The combining character U+030C can be placed together with either c or C to generally achieve the same visual result.

TeX/LaTeX

In text the control sequence \v{c} will work. In math mode, $\check{c}$ also works.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "č". Croatian Encyclopedia (in Croatian). Zagreb: Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.