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J

Latin_alphabet_Jj.png

The tenth letter of the Latin alphabet, J was originally only a capital letter, therefore, some people still write their names as Jsabel, Jnes instead of Isabel, Ines in the German-speaking world, and in Italy, in pre-modern use one also sometimes encounters J as a capital of I.

The Humanistic scholar Pierre de la Ramée (d. 1572) was the first to make a distinction between I and J. Originally, both I and J were pronounced as [i], [1], and [j]; but Romance languages developed new sounds (from former [j] and [g]) that came to be represented as I and J; therefore, English J has a sound quite different from I.

In other Germanic languages J stands for /j/.

In modern standard Italian only foreign or Latin words have J. Until the 19th century, J was used instead of I in diphthongs, as a replacement for final -ii, or in vowels groups (as in Savoja); this rule was quite strict for official writing. J is also used for rendering words in dialect, where it stands for /j/, e.g. Romanesque ajo for standard aglio (garlic).

In Spanish J stands for /x/ (that in some cases developed from the /dZ/ sound, i.e. the same sound that English still has). In French former /dZ/ is now pronounced as /Z/ (as in English MEASURE).

In Turkish, Azeri and Tatar J is always prounced [zh]. (see SAMPA for meaning of all those phonetic symbols).

Juliet represents the letter J in the NATO phonetic alphabet.

J is also:

See also: Ĵ

Two-letter combinations starting with J:

Referenced By

1572 | 8859-1 | Ajanta | Albanian Alphabet | Alphabet | Alphabets | Alphabets derived from the Latin | CP1252 | Catalan alphabet | Danish alphabet | Danish and Norwegian alphabet | English alphabet | Estonian alphabet | Finnish alphabet | French alphabet | German (alphabet) | German alphabet | Hungarian alphabet | ISO-8859-1 | ISO-8859-2 | ISO/IEC 8859-1 | ISO 8859-1 | ISO 8859-10 | ISO 8859-11 | ISO 8859-13 | ISO 8859-14 | ISO 8859-15 | ISO 8859-16 | ISO 8859-2 | ISO 8859-3 | ISO 8859-4 | ISO 8859-5 | ISO 8859-6 | ISO 8859-7 | ISO 8859-8 | ISO 8859-9 | Icelandic alphabet | Juliet | Latin-1 | Latin-10 | Latin-2 | Latin-3 | Latin-4 | Latin-5 | Latin-6 | Latin-7 | Latin-8 | Latin-9 | Latin alphabet | Latin script | Norwegian alphabet | Roman alphabet | Roman letter | Roman letters | Roman script | SAMPA/English | SAMPA chart for English | Slovenian alphabet | Spanish alphabet | Swedish alphabet | Time Zone | Time zones | Timezone | Turkish alphabet | U diaeresis | Unicode 51-75 | Windows-1252

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "J".

 

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