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  1. Ч, ч (cursiva: Ч, ч) es una letra del alfabeto cirílico, cuyo nombre en ruso es: чэ /ʧɛ/. Es la vigésimo cuarta letra en el alfabeto búlgaro, la vigésimo quinta en el alfabeto ruso, la vigésimo sexta en el alfabeto bielorruso, la vigésimo octava en los alfabeto serbocroata y ucraniano, y la vigésimo novena en el alfabeto macedonio .

  2. This is a list of letters of the Cyrillic script. The definition of a Cyrillic letter for this list is a character encoded in the Unicode standard that a has script property of 'Cyrillic' and the general category of 'Letter'.

    • Form
    • History
    • Usage
    • Related Letters and Other Similar Characters
    • References
    • External Links

    The letter Che (Ч ч) resembles an upside-down lowercase Latin H, as well as resembling the digit 4, especially in digital or open-ended form.

    The name of Che in the Early Cyrillic alphabet was чрьвь (črĭvĭ), meaning "worm". In the Cyrillic numeral system, Che had a value of 90.

    Slavic languages

    In all Slavic languages that use the Cyrillic alphabet, except Russian, Che represents the voiceless postalveolar affricate /tʃ/. In Russian, Che usually represents the voiceless alveolo-palatal affricate /t͡ɕ/, like the Mandarin pronunciation of j in pinyin. However, in a few words, it is pronounced as /tʂ/, like in Russian: лучше. Ч/ч is also pronounced as /tʂ/ in Serbian, as the Serbian letter Ћ/ћ is used for the /t͡ɕ/sound. In Russian, in a few words, it represents /ʂ/ (like English ⟨sh⟩...

    In China

    The 1955 version of Hanyu pinyin contained the Che for the sound [tɕ] (for which later the letter j was used), apparently because of its similarity to the Bopomofo letterㄐ.[citation needed] The Latin Zhuang alphabet used a modified Hindu-Arabic numeral 4, strongly resembling Che, from 1957 to 1986 to represent the fourth (falling) tone. In 1986, it was replaced by the Latin letter X.

    4 : 4- Number that very closely resembles Che, especially in digital or open ended form
    C c : Latin letter C- the same sound in Malay, Indonesian, Italian
    Č č : Latin letter C with caron
    Ç ç : Latin letter C with cedilla- an Albanian, Azerbaijani, Kurdish, Turkish, and Turkmen letter

    Explanatory footnotes

    ^† In some varieties of Western Cyrillic, Ҁ was used for 90, and Ч was used for 60 instead of Ѯ.

    The dictionary definition of Чat Wiktionary
    The dictionary definition of чat Wiktionary
  3. Ьь. El signo suave (Ь, ь, en ruso: мя́гкий знак, romanizado : myagkiy znak) también conocido como yer anterior, es una letra del alfabeto cirílico. En eslavo eclesiástico antiguo, representaba una vocal corta (o "reducida") anterior. Como su compañera, el "signo duro" Ъ, el fonema vocálico que designaba fue luego en parte ...

  4. Che ( Ч, ч) is the twenty-second letter in the Cyrillic alphabet. It sounds like [tʃ]. It is transliterated into the Roman alphabet as ch in English and tch in French . It is read as "č" for words like "swi tch " or " ch ange" [1] The letter also is used for the "tch" sound. History.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ČČ - Wikipedia

    In Slovak it is sixth letter of the alphabet. It is also used in Pashto (equivalent to چ ), romanization of Syriac and Saanich . It is equivalent to Ч in Cyrillic and can be used in Ukrainian, Belarusian, Russian, Serbian, and Bulgarian romanisations. It features more prominently in the Latin alphabets or transliterations of Serbo-Croatian ...

  6. Tshe (Ћ ћ; cursiva: Ћ ћ) es una letra del alfabeto cirílico, con una pronunciación similar a ch . El sonido de Tshe se produce a partir de la oclusiva alveolar sorda /t/ por iotacismo. Tshe es la vigésima tercera letra del alfabeto serbio.