Zhe (Ж, ж) is the letter of Cyrillic alphabet which represents the voiced postalveolar fricative (Con-34b.wav), similar to the s in the English word treasure.
Zhe is the seventh letter of the Bulgarian alphabet, the eighth letter in the Belarusian, Macedonian, Russian and Serbian alphabets, and the ninth in the Ukrainian alphabet. It is also found in most non-Slavic languages written in the Cyrillic script, representing either , , or . In the old Cyrillic alphabet, zhe was the seventh letter. Its name was (zhivěte, 'live' imp.), and it did not have a numerical value.
) which represents the same sound. However, the origin of zhivete, like that of most Glagolitic letters, is unclear. One possibility is that it was formed from two connecting letters shin ש, the bottom one inverted. Several Cyrillic letters derive directly from Hebrew letters and ш, which represents the unvoiced counterpart of zhe, is one of these.
Zhe is most often transliterated as zh, more rarely as zx, except in Serbian and Macedonian where it is most often transliterated as ž, or, lacking diacritics, simply as z.
The closest Polish counterpart is ż.
Zhe is one of the first letters learned by children who learn to write in Slavic languages, because it looks quite like a young frog floating in a pond, and in these languages the word meaning "frog" or "toad" is written "жаба".
Zhe can also be used in Leet speak in place of the letter x. The rap group Kris Kross has a logo of two k's placed back-to-back similar to zhe.
| Character encoding | Case | Decimal | Hexadecimal | Octal | Binary |
| Unicode | Capital | 1046 | 0416 | 002026 | 0000010000010110 |
| Small | 1078 | 0436 | 002066 | 0000010000110110 | |
| ISO 8859-5 | Capital | 182 | b6 | 266 | 0010110110 |
| Small | 214 | d6 | 326 | 0011010110 | |
| KOI 8 | Capital | 246 | f6 | 366 | 0011110110 |
| Small | 214 | d6 | 326 | 0011010110 | |
| Windows 1251 | Capital | 198 | c6 | 306 | 0011000110 |
| Small | 230 | e6 | 346 | 0011100110 |
Its HTML entities are: Ж or Ж for capital and ж or ж for small letter.
Ж (lizherenn) | Zhe (cyrillique) | Ж (Cirillico) | Ж | Ж | Ж | Zhe (Cirílico) | Ж (кириллица) | Ж (ћириличко) | Ж | Ж
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Zhe (Cyrillic)".
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