ć

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ć U+0107, ć
LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH ACUTE
Composition:c [U+0063] + ◌́ [U+0301]
Ć
[U+0106]
Latin Extended-A Ĉ
[U+0108]

Translingual

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Symbol

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ć

  1. (NAPA) a voiceless alveopalatal affricate (IPA [t͜ɕ]).

Lower Sorbian

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Pronunciation

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Letter

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ć (upper case Ć)

  1. The fifth letter of the Lower Sorbian alphabet, called ćej and written in the Latin script.

Usage notes

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This letter appears only after one of the letters ⟨s š ś z ž ź⟩, where it replaces ⟨ś⟩.

See also

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Polish

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Etymology

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The Polish orthography is based on the Latin alphabet. No earlier script is known. See the history of Polish orthography article on Wikipedia for more, and ć for development of the glyph itself.

Pronunciation

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Letter

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ć (lower case, upper case Ć)

  1. The fifth letter of the Polish alphabet, called ci and written in the Latin script.

See also

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Romani

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Pronunciation

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Letter

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ć (lower case, upper case Ć)

  1. (International Standard) The fourth letter of the Romani alphabet, written in the Latin script.
    Synonym: (Pan-Vlax) č

See also

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References

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  • Yūsuke Sumi (2018) “Ć, ć”, in ニューエクスプレス ロマ(ジプシー)語 [New Express Romani (Gypsy)] (in Japanese), Tokyo: Hakusuisha, →ISBN, page 13

Serbo-Croatian

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Alternative forms

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  • Ć (uppercase)

Pronunciation

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Letter

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ć (Cyrillic spelling ћ)

  1. The 5th letter of the Serbo-Croatian Latin alphabet (gajica), preceded by č and followed by d.

Silesian

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Etymology

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The Silesian orthography is based on the Latin alphabet. No earlier script is known. See the Silesian language article on Wikipedia for more, and ć for development of the glyph itself.

Letter

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ć (lower case, upper case Ć)

  1. The fifth letter of the Silesian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

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Slovene

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Etymology

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From Gaj's Latin alphabet ć, from Polish alphabet ć, from Latin c, a modification of uppercase letter C, from Etruscan 𐌂 (c), from Ancient Greek Γ (G, Gamma), from Phoenician 𐤂 (g, gimel). Pronunciation as IPA(key): /t͡ʃə/ is initial Slovene (phoneme plus a fill vowel) and the second pronunciation is probably by analogy of German C from German.

Pronunciation

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  • (phoneme, standard): IPA(key): /t͡ʃ/
  • (phoneme, dialectal, educated): IPA(key): /t͡ɕ/
  • (letter name, standard): IPA(key): /mɛ̀ːxki t͡ʃə́/, /mɛ̀ːxki t͡ʃèː/, /mɛ̀ːxki t͡ʃéː/ (mehki č)
  • (letter name, dialectal, educated): IPA(key): /t͡ɕə́/, /t͡ɕéː/, /t͡ɕèː/
  • Rhymes: , -eː

Letter

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ć (lower case, upper case Ć)

  1. Additional letter used primarily in loanwords from Serbo-Croatian.
  2. The sixth letter of the Slovene alphabet (Resian), written in the Latin script.

Symbol

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ć

  1. (SNPT) Phonetic transcription of sound [t͡ɕ].

Noun

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ć m inan

  1. The name of the Latin script letter Ć / ć.

Inflection

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  • Overall more common
The diacritics used in this section of the entry are non-tonal. If you are a native tonal speaker, please help by adding the tonal marks.
Masculine inan., soft o-stem
nom. sing. ć
gen. sing. ć-ja
singular dual plural
nominative
(imenovȃlnik)
ć ć-ja ć-ji
genitive
(rodȋlnik)
ć-ja ć-jev ć-jev
dative
(dajȃlnik)
ć-ju ć-jema ć-jem
accusative
(tožȋlnik)
ć ć-ja ć-je
locative
(mẹ̑stnik)
ć-ju ć-jih ć-jih
instrumental
(orọ̑dnik)
ć-jem ć-jema ć-ji
  • More common when with a definite adjective
Masculine inan., no endings
nom. sing. ć
gen. sing. ć
singular dual plural
nominative ć ć ć
accusative ć ć ć
genitive ć ć ć
dative ć ć ć
locative ć ć ć
instrumental ć ć ć

See also

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References

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Steenwijk, Han (1994) Ortografia resiana = Tö jošt rozajanskë pïsanjë (overall work in Italian and Slovene), Padua: CLEUP

Upper Sorbian

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Pronunciation

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Letter

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ć (lower case, upper case Ć)

  1. The fifth letter of the Upper Sorbian alphabet, called ćet and written in the Latin script.

See also

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