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Qa (Cyrillic)

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Cyrillic letter Qa


Phonetic usage:[q], formerly also /qʼ/
Derived from:Latin letter Q
The Cyrillic script
Slavic letters
АА̀А̂А̄ӐӒБВ
ГҐДЂЃЕЀЕ̂
Е̄ЁЄЄ́ЖЗЗ́Ѕ
ИІІ́ЇЍИ̂Ӣ
ЙӤЈКЛЉМН
ЊОО̀О̂О̄ӦПР
СС́ТЋЌУУ̀У̂
ӮЎӰФХЦЧЏ
ШЩЪЪ̀ЫЬѢ
ЭЮЮ̀ЯЯ̀ʼˮ
Non-Slavic letters
А̊А̃Ӓ̄ӔӘӘ́Ә̃Ӛ
В̌ԜГ̑Г̇Г̣Г̌Г̂Г̆
Г̈Г̊ҔҒӺҒ̌Ғ̊
ӶГ̡Д́Д̌Д̈Д̣Д̆Ӗ
Е̃Ё̄Є̈ԐԐ̈ҖӜӁ
Ж̣ҘӞЗ̌З̣З̆ӠИ̃
И̇ҊҚӃҠҞҜК̣
К̊Қ̊ԚЛ́ӅԮԒ
Л̈ӍН́ӉҢԨӇ
ҤО̆О̃Ӧ̄ӨӨ̄Ө́Ө̆
ӪԤП̈Р̌ҎС̌ҪС̣
С̱Т́Т̈Т̌Т̇Т̣Ҭ
У̃У̌ӲУ̊Ӱ̄ҰҮҮ́
Х̣Х̱Х̮Х̑Х̌ҲӼХ̊
ӾӾ̊ҺҺ̈ԦЦ̌Ц̈Ҵ
ҶҶ̣ӴӋҸЧ̇Ч̣
ҼҾШ̣Ы̆Ы̄Ӹ
ҌҨЭ̆Э̄Э̇ӬӬ́Ӭ̄
Ю̆Ю̈Ю̄Я̆Я̄Я̈Ӏ
Archaic or unused letters

Qa (Ԛ ԛ; italics: Ԛ ԛ) is a letter of the Cyrillic script. Its form is based on the Latin letter Q (Q q). The lowercase form can look like a reversed Cyrillic letter Р, and the uppercase as well depending on font.

Qa is used in the Cyrillic alphabet of the Kurdish language, where it represents the voiceless uvular plosive /q/. It was also used to represent /q’/, the uvular ejective stop (now represented by Ҟ ҟ), in the Translation Committee's Abkhaz alphabet,[1] published around the turn of the 20th century, and to represent /q/ in three old Ossetian alphabets (now represented by Хь хъ).

This character appeared in newspapers and articles such as 1955's Кӧрдо.[citation needed]

The letter was also used in the scrapped version of the Azerbaijani alphabet.[citation needed] It was, however, eliminated and replaced by Ҝ in Dagestan.

Computing codes

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Character information
Preview Ԛ ԛ
Unicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER QA CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER QA
Encodings decimal hex dec hex
Unicode 1306 U+051A 1307 U+051B
UTF-8 212 154 D4 9A 212 155 D4 9B
Numeric character reference Ԛ Ԛ ԛ ԛ

See also

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Other Cyrillic letters used to write the sound /q/:

References

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  1. ^ Everson, M; Birnbaum, D; Cleminson, R; Derzhanski, I; Dorosh, V; Kryukov, A; Paliga, S; Ruppel, K (2007). "Proposal to encode additional Cyrillic characters in the BMP of the UCS" (PDF). Unicode.
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