A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wo_(kana) below:

Wo (kana) - Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Character of the Japanese writing system

Character of the Japanese writing system

, in hiragana, or in katakana, is one of the Japanese kana, each of which represents one mora. Historically, both are phonemically /wo/, reflected in the Nihon-shiki wo, although the contemporary pronunciation is [o] , reflected in the Hepburn romanization and Kunrei-shiki romanization[1] o. Thus it is pronounced identically to the kana o. Despite this phonemic merger, the kana wo is sometimes regarded as a distinct phoneme from /o/, represented as /wo/, to account for historical pronunciation and for orthographic purposes.

In the 1946 orthographic reforms, を was largely replaced by お. In Japanese, this kana is used almost exclusively for a particle for both forms; therefore, the katakana form (ヲ) is rare in everyday language, mostly seen in all-katakana text. A "wo" sound is usually represented as うぉ or ウォ instead.

Despite originally representing [wo], the mora is pronounced [o] by almost all modern speakers. Singers may pronounce it with the [w], as a stylistic effect. Apart from some literate speakers who have revived [wo] as a spelling pronunciation[citation needed], though, this [w] sound is extinct in the modern spoken language. Some non-standard dialectal Japanese still pronounce it [wo], notably dialects in the Ehime Prefecture.[citation needed]

In Romaji, the kana is transliterated variably as ⟨o⟩ or ⟨wo⟩, with the former being faithful to standard pronunciation, but the latter avoiding confusion with お and オ, and being in line with the structure of the gojūon. is transliterated as o in Modified Hepburn and Kunrei and as wo in Traditional Hepburn and Nippon-shiki.

Katakana ヲ can sometimes be combined with a dakuten, ヺ, to represent a /vo/ sound in foreign words; however, most IMEs lack a convenient way to do this as this usage has largely fallen into disuse. The digraph ヴォ is used far more frequently to represent the /vo/ sound.

Hiragana を is still used in several Okinawan orthographies for the mora /o~wo/; in the Ryukyu University system, it is /o/, whereas お is /ʔo/. Katakana ヲ is used in Ainu for /wo/.

Stroke order in writing を Stroke order in writing ヲ Other communicative representations[edit] Character information Preview を ヲ ヲ ㋾ Unicode name HIRAGANA LETTER WO KATAKANA LETTER WO HALFWIDTH KATAKANA LETTER WO CIRCLED KATAKANA WO Encodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hex Unicode 12434 U+3092 12530 U+30F2 65382 U+FF66 13054 U+32FE UTF-8 227 130 146 E3 82 92 227 131 178 E3 83 B2 239 189 166 EF BD A6 227 139 190 E3 8B BE GB 18030 164 242 A4 F2 165 242 A5 F2 132 49 150 50 84 31 96 32 129 57 214 50 81 39 D6 32 Numeric character reference を を ヲ ヲ ヲ ヲ ㋾ ㋾ Shift JIS[2] 130 240 82 F0 131 146 83 92 166 A6 EUC-JP[3] 164 242 A4 F2 165 242 A5 F2 142 166 8E A6 EUC-KR[4] / UHC[5] 170 242 AA F2 171 242 AB F2 Big5 (non-ETEN kana)[6] 198 246 C6 F6 199 172 C7 AC Big5 (ETEN / HKSCS)[7] 199 121 C7 79 199 238 C7 EE Character information Preview 𛅒 𛅦 ヺ Unicode name HIRAGANA LETTER SMALL WO KATAKANA LETTER SMALL WO KATAKANA LETTER VO Encodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex Unicode 110930 U+1B152 110950 U+1B166 12538 U+30FA UTF-8 240 155 133 146 F0 9B 85 92 240 155 133 166 F0 9B 85 A6 227 131 186 E3 83 BA UTF-16 55340 56658 D82C DD52 55340 56678 D82C DD66 12538 30FA GB 18030 147 54 132 52 93 36 84 34 147 54 134 52 93 36 86 34 129 57 167 56 81 39 A7 38 Numeric character reference 𛅒 𛅒 𛅦 𛅦 ヺ ヺ Shift JIS (KanjiTalk 7)[8] 136 109 88 6D Shift JIS-2004[9] 132 149 84 95 EUC-JIS-2004[10] 167 245 A7 F5

Look up

or

in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.


RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.4