Shha

Last updated • 1 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Ha/He (Shha)
Һ һ
Cyrillic letter Shha.svg
Usage
Writing system Cyrillic
Type Alphabetic
Sound values/ h /, / ħ /, / ʰ /, / ɣ /
History
Development
H h
  • Һ һ
This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.For the distinction between [ ], / / and  , see IPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.

Ha or He (Shha in Unicode) (Һ һ; italics: Һ һ) is a letter of the Cyrillic script. [1] Its form is derived from the Latin letter H (H h h), but the capital forms are more similar to a rotated Cyrillic letter Che (Ч ч) or a stroke-less Tshe (Ћ ћ) because the Cyrillic letter En н) already has the same form as the Latin letter H.

Contents

Most of the languages using the letter call it ha - the name shha was created when the letter was encoded in Unicode, as the name ha was already taken by Kha. (Х х)

Shha often represents the voiceless glottal fricative /h/, like the pronunciation of h in "hat"; and is used in the alphabets of the following languages:

LanguageNotesPhoneme
Azerbaijani 1939–1991, now uses a Latin alphabet (Still used by Dagestan)/h/,/ħ/
Bashkir /h/
Buryat /h/
Dolgan /h/
Kalmyk /ɣ/
Kazakh Only used in Arabic, Persian loanwords and some exceptions/h/
Kildin Sami Also represented by the modifier letter apostrophe (ʼ)/◌ʰ/
Kurdish /h/
Tatar /h/
Yakut /h/

Computing codes

Character information
PreviewҺһ
Unicode nameCYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER SHHACYRILLIC SMALL LETTER SHHA
Encodingsdecimalhexdechex
Unicode 1210U+04BA1211U+04BB
UTF-8 210 186D2 BA210 187D2 BB
Numeric character reference ҺҺһһ

See also

References

  1. "Cyrillic: Range: 0400–04FF" (PDF). The Unicode Standard, Version 6.0. 2010. p. 42. Retrieved 2011-05-18.