Ď

The grapheme Ď (minuscule: ď) is a letter in the Czech and Slovak alphabets used to denote /ɟ/, the voiced palatal plosive, the sound similar to British English d in dew. It was also used in Polabian. It is formed from Latin D with the addition of háček, minuscule (ď) has háček modified to apostrophe-like stroke instead of wedge. In the alphabet, Ď is placed right after regular D.

Ď is also used to represent uppercase ð in the Coat of Arms of Shetland; however, the typical form is Ð.

Encoding

CharacterĎď
Unicode nameLATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH CARONLATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH CARON
Encodingsdecimalhexdecimalhex
Unicode270U+010E271U+010F
UTF-8196 142C4 8E196 143C4 8F
Numeric character referenceĎĎďď

In Unicode, the letters are encoded at U+010E Ď LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH CARON (HTML Ď)[1] and U+010F ď LATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH CARON (HTML ď).[2]

See also

References

  1. "Unicode Character 'LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH CARON' (U+010E)". FileFormat.Info. Retrieved 21 October 2010.
  2. "Unicode Character 'LATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH CARON' (U+010F)". FileFormat.Info. Retrieved 21 October 2010.
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