Cedilla

Template:Diacritical marks A cedilla is a hook (¸) added under certain consonant letters as a diacritic mark to modify their pronunciation. The tail is the bottom half of a miniature cursive z or Ezh: Ʒ/ʒ (Romanized cursive 'z'). The name "cedilla" is the diminutive of the old Spanish name for the letter Z, ceda. An obsolete spelling of "cedilla" is "cerilla" because the letters d and r were interchangeable in 16th-century Spanish.

ç Ç

The most frequent character with cedilla is the ç (c with cedilla). This letter was used for the sound of the affricate [ts] in old Spanish. Spanish has not used it since an orthographic reform in the 18th century, except informally in shortened word forms where the letter "c" would produce the wrong sound, such as "Barça" for "Barcelona", a nickname often applied to one of Barcelona's football (soccer) teams.

C-cedilla was adopted for writing other languages. In some languages, including French, Portuguese, Catalan, unofficial Basque, Occitan, and some Friulian dialects, it represents /s/ where "c" would normally represent /k/; in others, including Turkish, Albanian, Azerbaijani, Tatar, Turkmen, Kurdish (at least the Mahabad dialect), and some Friulian dialects, it is used for the sound of the affricate (the same of English in church). It is also sometimes used in the Romanization of Arabic.

In French and Portuguese, ç is used before a, o, or u to indicate that it is read /s/ (unlike c, which is read /k/ before a, o, and u). It is not used before e or i, since c itself is read /s/ before e and i. Additionally, Portuguese never uses ç at the beginning of a word. In French, the cedilla is known as cédille; in Portuguese, as cedilha.

And the s-cedilla, ş, represents (as in show) in Turkish, Azerbaijan, Tatar, Turkmen, and Kurdish. It is also used in some Romanizations of Arabic, Persian, and Pashto, for the letter ar_r.

In the International Phonetic Alphabet, ç represents the voiceless palatal fricative.

In the Turkish alphabet both Ç and Ş are considered separate letters, not variants of C and S.

A few words are sometimes spelled in English with a ç, almost all of them borrowings from French, for example façade, soupçon and garçon.

The Romanian Ș (ș) seemingly resembles the Turkish s cedilla, but it is actually a comma (Virgula). While it is common in online contexts to use Ş/ş and Ţ/ţ in writing Romanian, that is only because they look almost right and are much more widely supported in character sets. The orthographically correct characters are Ș/ș and Ț/ț (may not appear on your browser).

Romanian comma below

Unicode distinguishes COMBINING COMMA BELOW from COMBINING CEDILLA, and encodes S WITH CEDILLA for use in Turkic languages and S WITH COMMA BELOW and T WITH COMMA BELOW for use in Romanian. (These characters were added to Unicode 3.0 at the request of the Romanian national standardization body.) The letter T WITH CEDILLA is sometimes used in transliteration of Arabic (as in The Times Atlas of the World).

Romanian authorities consider Ş/ş and Ţ/ţ to be "wrong"; though if text is marked as being in the Romanian language, glyphs appropriate for Romanian should be chosen. The Romanian position is that Romanian data should be migrated from CEDILLA to COMMA BELOW.

External links

See also


Latin alphabet: Aa | Bb | Cc | Dd | Ee | Ff | Gg | Hh | Ii | Jj | Kk | Ll | Mm | Nn | Oo | Pp | Qq | Rr | Ss | Tt | Uu | Vv | Ww | Xx | Yy | Zz
Modified characters:

Àà | Áá | Ââ | Ää | Åå | Āā | Ąą | Çç | Ĉĉ | Čč | Ćć | Đđ | Ęę | Ëë | Ĝĝ | Ğğ | Ĥĥ | Įį | Ïï | İı | Ĵĵ | Łł | Ññ | Õõ | Öö | Őő | Øø | Ǫǫ | Şş | Șș | Šš | Ŝŝ | Țț | Ŭŭ | Üü | Ųų | Ůů | Űű | Žž

Alphabet extensions: Ææ | Ðð | DZdz | DŽdž | Əə | Ȝȝ | Ƕƕ | ĸ | LJlj | LLll | NJnj | Ŋŋ | Œœ | Ȣȣ | [[Half r|]] | ſ | ß | Þþ | Ƿƿ | IJij
br:Lostig

de:Cédille fr:Cédille ja:セディーユ pt:Ç wa:Cedile

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