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Dze

Dze (Ѕ ѕ) is a letter of the Cyrillic script, used in the Macedonian alphabet to represent the voiced alveolar affricate /d͡z/, similar to the pronunciation of ⟨ds⟩ in "needs" or "kids" in English. It is derived from the letter dzelo or zelo of the Early Cyrillic alphabet, and it was used historically for Old Church Slavonic, Ukrainian, Russian, and Romanian.

Cyrillic letter Dze
Phonetic usage:[d͡z]
Name:ѕѣло
Numeric value:6
The Cyrillic script
Slavic letters
Non-Slavic letters
ӐА̊А̃Ӓ̄ӔӘӘ́Ә̀
Ә̃ӚӘ̄В̌ҒГ̑Г̣Г̌
Г̂Г̆Г̈ҔӺҒ̌ӶД́
Д̌Д̈Д̣Д̆ӖЕ̃Ё̄Є̈
ҖӜӁЖ̣ҘӞЗ̌З̣
З̆ԐԐ́Ԑ̈ӠИ̃ӤҊ
І̄́ҚӃҠҞҜК̣Ԛ
Л́ӅԮԒЛ̈ӍН́
Н̃ӉҢԨӇҤО̆О̃
Ӧ̄ӨӨ̄Ө́Ө̆ӪҨԤ
П̈Р̌ҎС̌ҪС̣Т́Т̈
Т̌Т̇Т̣ҬТЬУ̃ӲУ̊
Ӱ̄ҮҮ́Ү̈ҰХ̣Х̱Х̮
Х̑Х̌ҲӼӾҺҺ̈Һ̌
ԦЦ̌Ц̈ҴҶҶ̣ӴӋ
Ч̡ҸЧ̇Ч̣ҼҾШ̈Ш̣
Ы̆Ы̄ӸҌЭ̆Э̄Э̇Ӭ
Ӭ́Ӭ̄Ю̆Ю̈Ю̈́Ю̄Я̆Я̄
Я̈Я̈́ԜӀ
Archaic or unused letters
А̨Б̀Б̣В̀Г̀Г̧Г̄
Г̓Г̆Ҕ̆Д̓Д̀Д̨Ԁ
ԂЕ̨Џ̆Ж̑
Ꚅ̆ԪЗ̀З̑
ԄԆІ̂І̨
Ј̵К̓К̆Ӄ̆К̑К̇
К̈К̄ԞК̂Ԛ̆Л̀Ԡ
ԈЛ̑Л̇ԔМ̀Н̀Н̄
ԊԢН̢Ѻ
П̓П́П̧Ҧ
П̑ҀҺ̡Р́Р̀ԖС̀С̈
ԌҪ̓Т̓Т̀ԎТ̑
Т̧Ꚍ̆Ѹ
У̇У̊У̨Ф̑Ф̓Х́Х̀Х̆
Х̇Х̓ѠѼѾ
Ц́Ц̓Ꚏ̆
Ч̀Ч̑Ч̓ԬꚆ̆
Ҽ̆Ш̆Ш̑Щ̆Ꚗ̆
Ы̃Ѣ́Ѣ̈Ѣ̆Э̨Ю̂
Я̂Я̨ԘѤѦѪ
ѨѬѮѰѲѴ
Ѷ

Although fully obsolete everywhere in the Cyrillic world by the 19th century, the letter zelo was revived in 1944 by the designers of the alphabet of the then-codified Macedonian language. The phoneme is also present in Greek (ΤΖ τζ) and Albanian (X x), both non-Slavic neighbours to the Macedonian language; all are a part of the Balkan linguistic area.[1] In the early 21st century, the same letter also appeared in Vojislav Nikčević's proposal for the new alphabet for the modern Montenegrin language.

The most common early letterform (Ѕ ѕ) resembles the Latin letter S (S s), but it is also seen reversed (Ꙅ ꙅ) like the Latin letter Reversed S (Ƨ ƨ), or with a tail and a tick (Ꙃ ꙃ).

Abkhaz has Abkhazian Dze (Ӡ ӡ), with an identical function and name but a different shape.

There's is a different letter name, sne

Origin

The letter is descended from ѕѣло (pronounced dzělo;  ) in the Early Cyrillic alphabet, where it had the numerical value 6. The letter Dzělo was itself based on the letter Dzelo in the Glagolitic alphabet. In the Glagolitic alphabet, it was written ⟨Ⰷ⟩, and had the numerical value of 8. In Old Church Slavonic it was called ѕѣло (pronounced dzeló), and in Church Slavonic it is called ѕѣлѡ (pronounced zeló).

The origin of Glagolitic letter Dzelo is unclear, but the Cyrillic Ѕ may have been influenced by the Greek stigma ⟨Ϛ⟩, the medieval form of the archaic letter digamma, which had the same form and numerical value (6). Thus the visual similarity of the Cyrillic ⟨Ѕ⟩ and Latin ⟨S⟩ is largely coincidental.

Development

The initial sound of ⟨Ѕ⟩ in Old Church Slavonic was a soft /d͡z/ or /z/, which often corresponds in cognates to a /ɡ/ sound in modern Russian, as in мъноѕи (Russian: много), по ноѕѣ (Russian: нога), and растрьѕати (Russian: расторгать). However, in the Old Slavic period the difference between ⟨Ѕ⟩ and ⟨З⟩ had already begun to be blurred, and in the written Church Slavonic language from the middle of the 17th century ⟨Ѕ⟩ was used only formally. The letter's distinguishing features from ⟨З⟩ are:[2]

 
The seven root words commencing with the letter dze (aka, dzelo).
  • ⟨Ѕ⟩ is used in root derived from these seven words beginning with ⟨Ѕ⟩: ѕвѣзда, ѕвѣрь, ѕеліе, ѕлакъ, ѕлый, ѕмій, ѕѣлѡ ("star, beast, vegetable, herb, angry, dragon, very");
  • З⟩ is used in all remaining cases.
  • ⟨Ѕ⟩ has the numerical value of 6, whereas ⟨З⟩ has the numerical value of 7;

In Russian it was known as зѣло or zelo [zʲɪˈɫo] and had the phonetic value of /d͡z/, /z/ or /zʲ/.

In the initial version of Russian civil script of Tsar Peter I (1708), the ⟨Ѕ⟩ was assigned the sound /z/, and the letter ⟨З⟩ was abolished. However, in the second version of the civil script (1710), ⟨З⟩ was restored, and ⟨Ѕ⟩ was abolished. Both versions of the alphabet were used until 1735, which is considered the date of the final elimination of ⟨Ѕ⟩ in Russian.

See also Reforms of Russian orthography.

⟨Ѕ⟩ was used in the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet (where it represented /d͡z/) until the alphabet was abolished in favour of a Latin-based alphabet in 1860-62. ⟨Ѕ⟩ was also used—albeit rarely—to the middle of the 19th century in the Serbian civil script, whose orthography was closer to Church Slavonic (compared to Russian). Vuk Karadžić's Serbian Cyrillic alphabet (1868) did not include ⟨Ѕ⟩, instead favouring the digraph ⟨ДЗ⟩ to represent /dz/.

In Ukrainian, the sound /d͡z/ is integrated as part of the language's phonology, but it mainly occurs in loanwords rather than in words of native Ukrainian origin. As such, the digraph ⟨ДЗ⟩ is used to represent both the phoneme /d͡z/ and the separately occurring consonant cluster |d.z| which Ukrainian phonotactics assimilate as /d͡z.z/.

Usage

⟨Ѕ⟩ is now only used in the Macedonian alphabet. A commission formed to standardise the Macedonian language and orthography decided to adopt the letter on December 4, 1944, after a vote of 10-1. The letter represents /dz/ (examples including: ѕид/dzid, 'wall' and ѕвезда/dzvezda, 'star'). The corresponding sound is used in all dialects of Macedonian.

⟨Ѕ⟩ is also included in Microsoft's Serbian Cyrillic keyboard layout, although it is not used in the Serbian Cyrillic Alphabet. The Serbian keyboard in Ubuntu replaces Ѕ with a second Ж.

Related letters and other similar characters

Computing codes

Character information
Preview Ѕ ѕ
Unicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER DZE CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER DZE CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER REVERSED DZE CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER REVERSED DZE CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER DZELO CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER DZELO
Encodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hex dec hex dec hex
Unicode 1029 U+0405 1109 U+0455 42564 U+A644 42565 U+A645 42562 U+A642 42563 U+A643
UTF-8 208 133 D0 85 209 149 D1 95 234 153 132 EA 99 84 234 153 133 EA 99 85 234 153 130 EA 99 82 234 153 131 EA 99 83
Numeric character reference Ѕ Ѕ ѕ ѕ Ꙅ Ꙅ ꙅ ꙅ Ꙃ Ꙃ ꙃ ꙃ
Named character reference Ѕ ѕ
Code page 855 137 89 136 88
Windows-1251 189 BD 190 BE
ISO-8859-5 165 A5 245 F5
Macintosh Cyrillic 193 C1 207 CF

See also

References

  1. ^ Dontchev Daskalov, Roumen; Marinov, Tchavdar (2013), Entangled Histories of the Balkans: Volume One: National Ideologies and Language Policies, Balkan Studies Library, BRILL, p. 454, ISBN 978-9004250765
  2. ^ Gamanovich, Alypy (1964), Грамматика Церковно-Славянскаго Языка (Grammar of the Church Slavonic Language), Jordanville, New York: Printing shop of St. Job of Pochaev, Holy Trinity Monastery (published 1984), ISBN 978-0-88465-064-5

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of Ѕ at Wiktionary
  •   The dictionary definition of ѕ at Wiktionary
  • , September 1999 (PDF)

this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august, 2019, learn, when, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Dze news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message For the Pashto letter see Dze Pashto For the Georgian surname suffix dze see Georgian surname Not to be confused with the Latin letter S Dze Ѕ ѕ is a letter of the Cyrillic script used in the Macedonian alphabet to represent the voiced alveolar affricate d z similar to the pronunciation of ds in needs or kids in English It is derived from the letter dzelo or zelo of the Early Cyrillic alphabet and it was used historically for Old Church Slavonic Ukrainian Russian and Romanian Cyrillic letter DzePhonetic usage d z Name ѕѣloNumeric value 6The Cyrillic scriptSlavic lettersAA A A A ӒBVGGDЂЃEE ЀE E YoYeYe ZhZZ ЅIII YiI ЍI ӢJЈKLЉMNЊOO O O ŌӦPRSS TЋЌUU U U ӮЎӰFHCChЏShSh YY ѢEE YuYu Yu YaYa Ya Non Slavic lettersӐA A Ӓ ӔӘӘ Ә Ә ӚӘ V ҒG G G G G G ҔӺҒ ӶD D D D D ӖE Yo Ye ҖӜӁZh ҘӞZ Z Z ԐԐ Ԑ ӠI ӤҊI ҚӃҠҞҜK ԚL ӅԮԒL ӍᵸN N ӉҢԨӇҤO O Ӧ ӨӨ Ө Ө ӪҨԤP R ҎS ҪS T T T T T ҬTU ӲU Ӱ ҮҮ Ү ҰH H H H H ҲӼӾҺҺ Һ ԦC C ҴҶҶ ӴӋCh ҸCh Ch ҼҾSh Sh Y Y ӸҌE E E ӬӬ Ӭ Yu Yu Yu Yu Ya Ya Ya Ya ԜӀArchaic or unused lettersA B B V G G G G G Ҕ D D D ԀԂꚀꙢE Џ Zh ꚄꚄ ԪꙂꙄꙀZ Z ԄԆꚈꚂꚔI I ꙆЈ ꙈK K Ӄ K K K K ԞK Ԛ L ԠꙤԈL L ԔM ꙦN N ԊԢN ѺꙨꙪꙬꙮꚘꚚP P P ҦP ҀҺ R R ԖS S ԌҪ T T ԎT ꚊT ꚌꚌ ѸꙊU U U F F H H H H H ѠꙌѼѾꙠC C ꚎꚎ ꚐCh Ch Ch ԬꚒꚆꚆ Ҽ Sh Sh Sh ꚖꚖ ꙎꙐY Ѣ Ѣ Ѣ ꙒE ꙔYu ꙖYa Ya ԘѤѦꙘѪꙚѨꙜѬѮѰѲѴѶꙞList of Cyrillic letters Cyrillic digraphsvteAlthough fully obsolete everywhere in the Cyrillic world by the 19th century the letter zelo was revived in 1944 by the designers of the alphabet of the then codified Macedonian language The phoneme is also present in Greek TZ tz and Albanian X x both non Slavic neighbours to the Macedonian language all are a part of the Balkan linguistic area 1 In the early 21st century the same letter also appeared in Vojislav Nikcevic s proposal for the new alphabet for the modern Montenegrin language The most common early letterform Ѕ ѕ resembles the Latin letter S S s but it is also seen reversed Ꙅ ꙅ like the Latin letter Reversed S Ƨ ƨ or with a tail and a tick Ꙃ ꙃ Abkhaz has Abkhazian Dze Ӡ ӡ with an identical function and name but a different shape There s is a different letter name sne Contents 1 Origin 2 Development 3 Usage 4 Related letters and other similar characters 5 Computing codes 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOrigin EditThe letter is descended from ѕѣlo pronounced dzelo in the Early Cyrillic alphabet where it had the numerical value 6 The letter Dzelo was itself based on the letter Dzelo in the Glagolitic alphabet In the Glagolitic alphabet it was written Ⰷ and had the numerical value of 8 In Old Church Slavonic it was called ѕѣlo pronounced dzelo and in Church Slavonic it is called ѕѣlѡ pronounced zelo The origin of Glagolitic letter Dzelo is unclear but the Cyrillic Ѕ may have been influenced by the Greek stigma Ϛ the medieval form of the archaic letter digamma which had the same form and numerical value 6 Thus the visual similarity of the Cyrillic Ѕ and Latin S is largely coincidental Development EditThe initial sound of Ѕ in Old Church Slavonic was a soft d z or z which often corresponds in cognates to a ɡ sound in modern Russian as in mnoѕi Russian mnogo po noѕѣ Russian noga and rastrѕati Russian rastorgat However in the Old Slavic period the difference between Ѕ and Z had already begun to be blurred and in the written Church Slavonic language from the middle of the 17th century Ѕ was used only formally The letter s distinguishing features from Z are 2 The seven root words commencing with the letter dze aka dzelo Ѕ is used in root derived from these seven words beginning with Ѕ ѕvѣzda ѕvѣr ѕelie ѕlak ѕlyj ѕmij ѕѣlѡ star beast vegetable herb angry dragon very Z is used in all remaining cases Ѕ has the numerical value of 6 whereas Z has the numerical value of 7 In Russian it was known as zѣlo or zelo zʲɪˈɫo and had the phonetic value of d z z or zʲ In the initial version of Russian civil script of Tsar Peter I 1708 the Ѕ was assigned the sound z and the letter Z was abolished However in the second version of the civil script 1710 Z was restored and Ѕ was abolished Both versions of the alphabet were used until 1735 which is considered the date of the final elimination of Ѕ in Russian See also Reforms of Russian orthography Ѕ was used in the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet where it represented d z until the alphabet was abolished in favour of a Latin based alphabet in 1860 62 Ѕ was also used albeit rarely to the middle of the 19th century in the Serbian civil script whose orthography was closer to Church Slavonic compared to Russian Vuk Karadzic s Serbian Cyrillic alphabet 1868 did not include Ѕ instead favouring the digraph DZ to represent dz In Ukrainian the sound d z is integrated as part of the language s phonology but it mainly occurs in loanwords rather than in words of native Ukrainian origin As such the digraph DZ is used to represent both the phoneme d z and the separately occurring consonant cluster d z which Ukrainian phonotactics assimilate as d z z Usage Edit Ѕ is now only used in the Macedonian alphabet A commission formed to standardise the Macedonian language and orthography decided to adopt the letter on December 4 1944 after a vote of 10 1 The letter represents dz examples including ѕid dzid wall and ѕvezda dzvezda star The corresponding sound is used in all dialects of Macedonian Ѕ is also included in Microsoft s Serbian Cyrillic keyboard layout although it is not used in the Serbian Cyrillic Alphabet The Serbian keyboard in Ubuntu replaces Ѕ with a second Zh Related letters and other similar characters EditZ z Cyrillic letter Ze S s Latin letter S Ƨ ƨ Latin letter Reversed S X x Latin letter X an Albanian alphabet letter Ꚃ ꚃ Cyrillic letter Dzwe Ḑ ḑ Latin letter Ḑ a Livonian alphabet letter D d Latin letter D an obsolete Romanian letter Dz Digraph DzComputing codes EditCharacter information Preview Ѕ ѕ Ꙅ ꙅ Ꙃ ꙃUnicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER DZE CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER DZE CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER REVERSED DZE CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER REVERSED DZE CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER DZELO CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER DZELOEncodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hex dec hex dec hexUnicode 1029 U 0405 1109 U 0455 42564 U A644 42565 U A645 42562 U A642 42563 U A643UTF 8 208 133 D0 85 209 149 D1 95 234 153 132 EA 99 84 234 153 133 EA 99 85 234 153 130 EA 99 82 234 153 131 EA 99 83Numeric character reference amp 1029 wbr amp x405 wbr amp 1109 wbr amp x455 wbr amp 42564 wbr amp xA644 wbr amp 42565 wbr amp xA645 wbr amp 42562 wbr amp xA642 wbr amp 42563 wbr amp xA643 wbr Named character reference amp DScy amp dscy Code page 855 137 89 136 88Windows 1251 189 BD 190 BEISO 8859 5 165 A5 245 F5Macintosh Cyrillic 193 C1 207 CFSee also EditGlagolitic alphabet Early Cyrillic alphabet Cyrillic script Russian alphabet Reforms of Russian orthography Romanian Cyrillic alphabet Macedonian alphabetReferences Edit Dontchev Daskalov Roumen Marinov Tchavdar 2013 Entangled Histories of the Balkans Volume One National Ideologies and Language Policies Balkan Studies Library BRILL p 454 ISBN 978 9004250765 Gamanovich Alypy 1964 Grammatika Cerkovno Slavyanskago Yazyka Grammar of the Church Slavonic Language Jordanville New York Printing shop of St Job of Pochaev Holy Trinity Monastery published 1984 ISBN 978 0 88465 064 5External links Edit The dictionary definition of Ѕ at Wiktionary The dictionary definition of ѕ at Wiktionary A Berdnikov and O Lapko Old Slavonic and Church Slavonic in TEX and Unicode EuroTEX 99 Proceedings September 1999 PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dze amp oldid 1138623457, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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