:''J# redirects here for technical reasons; see
J Sharp.''
'J' is the tenth letter in the modern
Latin alphabet; it was the last of the 26 letters to be added. In most dialects of
English, it is pronounced ''jay'' , though in some dialects, especially in
Scotland and
Ireland, it may be pronounced "jye."
In the
International Phonetic Alphabet, represents the
palatal approximant.
On
alphanumeric keyboards using the
QWERTY layout, the
F and J keys generally have a raised bar (perceptible to the touch) over them to assist in
touch typing. All other keys can be found with their relative positions around these two keys as the
index finger is generally used to type the
F and the J.
History
'J' was originally an alternative version of
I. There was an emerging distinctive use in
Middle High German.
[1] Petrus Ramus (d.
1572) was the first to explicitly distinguish I and J as representing separate sounds. Originally, both I and J represented , , and ; but
Romance languages developed new sounds (from former and ) that came to be represented as I and J; therefore,
English J (from
French J) has a sound value quite different from .
All the
Germanic languages except English use ''J'' for . This is also true of
Albanian, and those
Uralic and
Slavic languages that use the Latin alphabet, such as
Hungarian,
Finnish,
Estonian,
Polish, and
Czech. Some languages in these families, such as
Serbian, also adopted J into the
Cyrillic alphabet for the same purpose. Because of this standard, the
minuscule letter was chosen to be used in the
IPA as the phonetic symbol for the sound.
Linguists from Germany and Central Europe also took up this letter in transliterations from those Slavic languages which use the Cyrillic alphabet. Specifically, the "
Е" in
Russian is sometimes transliterated "je" (with the "
Ð" becoming "jo"); the "
Я" is transliterated as "ja"; and the character "
Ю" is transliterated "ju" - whereas the linguists from America and the English speaking world use "y" in place of "j" because of English and Spanish use of Y for . European linguists also use the character
Й so that their transliterations of nominative case of adjectives ("-IJ") end in "-ij" whereas in American transliterations it's "-ii". The student who uses the American transliteration has to remember that the second "i" is different from the first in the original.
In modern standard
Italian spelling, only
Latin words or those of foreign languages have J. Until the
19th century, J was used instead of I in
diphthongs, as a replacement for final ''-ii'', and in vowel groups (as in ''Savoja''); this rule was quite strict for official writing. And J is also used for rendering words in dialect, where it stands for , e.g. Romanesque ''ajo'' for standard ''aglio'' (garlic). The Italian Novelist
Luigi Pirandello utilised J in vowel groups in his works.
In
Spanish J stands for (which developed from an earlier
affricate ); the actual phonetic realization depends on dialect. When followed by an 'A' or an 'O' however, it assumes a guttural sound (fricative uvular /X/), probably a remainder of
Arabic or
Hebrew influences.
In
French former is now pronounced as (as in English ''measure'').
In
Portuguese,
Romanian,
Turkish,
Azerbaijani and
Tatar J always represents .
Hebrew also influenced the English J, which in a few cases is used in place of the more normal Y. The classic example is
Hallelujah which is pronounced the same as "Halleluyah". See the
Hebrew yodh for more details.
J is used relatively infrequently in the
English Language, though it is more commonly used than
Q,
X or
Z.
In
German usage, the J is sometimes used on book and magazine covers in place of an initial "
I": for example, ''"JLLUSTRIERTE"'' ("Illustrated").
Many personal names common in English-speaking societies begin with J (e.g., Joseph, Jeffrey, John, James, Jason, Jacob, Joshua, Jane, Julia, Jessica, Jenny, Jill, Jimmy).
In
chemistry, J is the only letter not to appear in the
Periodic Table.
In
Electrical Engineering, j is used in place of the letter i to represent sqrt(-1) as i is commonly used to represent current.
Codes for computing
In
Unicode the
capital J is codepoint U+004A and the
lowercase j is U+006A. Unicode also has a dotless variant, (U+0237) for use with
combining diacritics.
The
ASCII code for capital J is 74 and for lowercase j is 106; or in
binary 01001010 and 01101010, correspondingly.
The
EBCDIC code for capital J is 209 and for lowercase j is 145.
w4karhlgaiwek-g9<4
The
numeric character references in
HTML and
XML are "
J" and "
j" for upper and lower case respectively.
Trivia
★ The dot above the lowercase "i" and "j" is known as a
tittle.
Meanings of J
:''See
J (disambiguation).''
Special uses in German and Swedish
In Germany and Sweden, this letter is often written with a long
serif on top, but only to the left of the character.
Also, in copy on covers of books and magazines in German, an initial "I" is usually printed as "J" (i.e. "JLLUSTRIERTE.")
See also
★
I
★
Tittle
References
1. Mittelhochdeutsches Handwörterbuch von Matthias Lexer (1878)