Ţ Explained

T-cedilla (majuscule: Ţ, minuscule: ţ) is a letter which is part of the Gagauz and Dobrujan Tatar alphabet, used to represent the sound pronounced as //t͡s//, the voiceless alveolar affricate (like ts in bolts, or like the letter C in Slavic languages). It is written as the letter T with a cedilla below and it has both the lower-case (U+0163) and the upper-case variants (U+0162). It is also used in the Manjak and Mankanya language for pronounced as //ʈ//.

Usage

The lower case is used in Semitic transliteration.[1]

This character was used in Kabyle (Berber) for the affricate pronounced as //t͡s// (now represented with a tt).

Romanian

See main article: T-comma. In early versions of Unicode, the Romanian letter Ț (T-comma) was considered a glyph variant of Ţ, and therefore was not present in the Unicode Standard. It is also not present in the Windows-1250 (Central Europe) code page. The letter was only added to the standard in Unicode 3.0 (1999), and some texts in Romanian still use Ţ instead.

Character encoding

HTML entity (HTML5 only, not supported by all browsers):

See also

References

  1. Web site: The Unicode Standard, Version 15.0. Unicode, Inc.. unicode.org. 2023-04-20.