Ď
Latin letter D with caron From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The grapheme Ď (minuscule: ď) is a letter in the Czech and Slovak alphabets used to denote /ɟ/, the voiced palatal plosive (precisely alveolo-palatal), a sound similar to British English d in dew.[1][2] It was also used in Polabian. The majuscule of the letter (Ď) is formed from Latin D with the addition of a háček; the minuscule of the letter (ď) has a háček modified to an apostrophe-like stroke instead of a wedge. When collating, Ď is placed right after regular D in the alphabet.

Ď is also used to represent uppercase eth in the coat of arms of Shetland although the standard uppercase form of eth is Ð.
Encoding
Preview | Ď | ď | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Unicode name | LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH CARON | LATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH CARON | ||
Encodings | decimal | hex | dec | hex |
Unicode | 270 | U+010E | 271 | U+010F |
UTF-8 | 196 142 | C4 8E | 196 143 | C4 8F |
Numeric character reference | Ď | Ď | ď | ď |
Named character reference | Ď | ď |
In Unicode, the letters are encoded at U+010E Ď LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH CARON (Ď) and U+010F ď LATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH CARON (ď).[3]
As recorded by the Unicode Consortium, the form of the minuscule letter preferred for typesetting is "d with a curved apostrophe" (rather than "d with a caron diacritic").[3]
See also
References
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