Ľ Explained

Ľ (minuscule: ľ) is a grapheme found officially in the Slovak alphabet and in some versions of the Ukrainian Latin alphabet. It is an L with a caron diacritical mark, more normally ˇ but simplified to look like an apostrophe with L, and is pronounced as palatal lateral approximant pronounced as /[ʎ]/, similar to the "lj-" sound in Ljubljana or million.[1]

Slovak

Examples include:

Note that an approximation using an ' apostrophe is sometimes found in some English texts, for example "L'udovit Stur" for correct Slovak Ľ-caron in Ľudovít Štúr. This incorrect usage is sometimes the result of an OCR error.

Ukrainian

⟨Ľ⟩ appears in some versions of the Ukrainian Latin Alphabet (Latynka), such as Jireček and Luchuk.[2] It represents a palatalised ⟨l⟩, transcribed as /lʲ/. In other versions, it is written as ⟨lj⟩ or ⟨li⟩.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://diacritics.typo.cz/index.php?id=5 Háček (Caron) - Diacritics Project @ Typo.cz
  2. Web site: Korotkyj pravopys . 2019-08-11 . 2011-12-15 . https://web.archive.org/web/20111215183424/http://www.vntl.com/im/pdf/pravopys.pdf . dead .