J̌
| J with caron | |
|---|---|
| J̌ ǰ | |
| ǰ, ĵ, ɉ, ʝ, j̇̃ | |
| Usage | |
| Writing system | Latin script |
| Type | Alphabet |
| History | |
| Variations | ǰ, ĵ, ɉ, ʝ, j̇̃ |
J̌ (minuscule: ǰ) is a letter of the Latin alphabet, derived from J with the addition of a caron (háček). It is used in some phonetic transcription schemes, e.g. ISO 9, to represent the sound [d͡ʒ]. It is also used in the Latin scripts or in the romanization of various Iranian and Pamir languages (Avestan, Pashto, Yaghnobi, and others), Armenian, Georgian, Berber/Tuareg, and Classical Mongolian. The letter was invented by Lepsius in his Standard Alphabet on the model of š and ž to avoid the confusion caused by the ambiguous pronunciation of the letter j in European languages.