J (letter): Difference between revisions

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(Span J)
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And '''g''' occurs more often than '''j''' before front vowels: '''Géoffrey, Gíllian''' (cf. '''Jíll'''), '''gîant, gigántic, Gërmany, géneral, George, géntle''', and is much more common inside words: '''âgent, págeant, pígeon, rêgion'''.
And '''g''' occurs more often than '''j''' before front vowels: '''Géoffrey, Gíllian''' (cf. '''Jíll'''), '''gîant, gigántic, Gërmany, géneral, George, géntle''', and is much more common inside words: '''âgent, págeant, pígeon, rêgion'''.


'''Majŏrca''' is pronounced *Məyŏrca.
'''Majŏrca''' is pronounced *Məyŏrca. Other Spanish '''j'''s have the '''h''' sound: '''Riója''' *Rióha, '''''Rajoy''''' *Rahŏy.


'''j''' does not begin consonant clusters, and the only '''jj''' is in '''hàjj''' (which may also be spelt '''hádj''').
'''j''' does not begin consonant clusters, and the only '''jj''' is in '''hàjj''' (which may also be spelt '''hádj''').

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J, j is a letter of the Latin alphabet. It is the tenth letter of most variants, being placed after I and before K, as is the case for instance in the English alphabet. Its English name is pronounced [ˈdʒeɪ], like the bird jay.

Use in English

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Use in English
Alphabetical word list
Retroalphabetical list  
Common misspellings  

j combines the two sounds d (as in dóg) and zh (as in Brézhnev or like z in ázure or s in pléasure). Many languages, including French, German, Portuguese and Arabic, do not have this sound. (Russian and Spanish have only the unvoiced version of it, t + sh, which is spelt ch in both English and Spanish, whence mácho.)

  • The accents show stress and pronunciation (see English spellings): A: sát, mâde, pàrk, cāst (cást/càst), åll, ãir; E: ére, êar, vèin, fërn; I: sít, mîne, skì, bïrd; O: sóng, môde, lòve, wörd, ŏr; OO: moôn, foòt; U: sún, mûse, fùll, pürr; W: neŵ, ẁant; Y: gým, mŷ, keỳ, mÿrrh.

j is common initially: jét, jázz, jíg, jést, jêep, jólly, Jûlia, jàr, jám, Jásper, Jóhn, Jêsus, Jeŵish, Jím, Jâmes, Jíll, Jáckson, Jéffrey (= Géoffrey) and after a prefix: disjŏinted, disjúnctive, injúnction, unjúst, injústice, outjúmp. Foreign learners, under the influence of their own language (notably francophones) often mispronounce j as zh: its normal sound is dzh.

j is rarely found alone, between two vowels, inside a word: cajôle, ajàr, rejéct. The normal spelling for the j sound medially is g or dg: pígeon, dúdgeon. So júdge is pronounced *júj.

j renders the d in ad- redundant: adjûdicate, ádjunct, ádjective, adjöurn, adjúst.

j is only used finally in words from Hindi: Ràj, Ámritràj. The normal spelling for the j sound finally is (d)ge: bádge, grúdge, plédge, dódge, gâuge, câge, pâge, wâge, sìêge, wâge, sâge, gàrbage, lúggage.

And g occurs more often than j before front vowels: Géoffrey, Gíllian (cf. Jíll), gîant, gigántic, Gërmany, géneral, George, géntle, and is much more common inside words: âgent, págeant, pígeon, rêgion.

Majŏrca is pronounced *Məyŏrca. Other Spanish js have the h sound: Riója *Rióha, Rajoy *Rahŏy.

j does not begin consonant clusters, and the only jj is in hàjj (which may also be spelt hádj).

Scientific uses

  • j: square root of minus one in engineering notation