Ẓāʼ
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arabic alphabet | ||||||
ﺍ || ﺏ || ﺕ || ﺙ || ﺝ || ﺡ || ﺥ | ||||||
ﺩ || ﺫ || ﺭ || ﺯ || ﺱ || ﺵ || ﺹ | ||||||
ﺽ || ﻁ || | ||||||
ﻙ || ﻝ || ﻡ || ﻥ || هـ || ﻭ || ﻱ | ||||||
History · Transliteration Diacritics · hamza ء Numerals · Numeration |
Ẓāʼ ( ﻅ) is one of the six letters the Arabic alphabet added to the twenty-two inherited from the Phoenician alphabet (the others being ṯāʼ, ḫāʼ, ḏāl, ḍād, ġayn). It represents a pharyngealized voiced dental fricative or voiced alveolar fricative (IPA: [ðˁ] or /zˁ/). In name and shape, it is a variant of ṭāʼ.
The Ẓāʼ sound is an emphatic /z/, pronounced with the center of the tongue depressed. Regional pronunciations vary; it may sound like an emphatic counterpart of either ز or ذ. In Persian it is indistinguishable from the former, occurring only in words of Arabic origin.
Ẓāʼ is the rarest phoneme of the Arabic language. Out of 2,967 triliteral roots listed by Wehr (1952), only 42 (1.4%) contain ﻅ.
In some reconstructions of Proto-Semitic phonology, there is an emphatic interdental fricative, ṱ (IPA: [θˁ] or /ðˁ/), featuring as the direct ancestor of Arabic Ẓāʼ, while it merged with ṣ in most other Semitic languages, although the South Arabian alphabet retained a symbol for ẓ. See also ḍād.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Hans Wehr, Arabisches Wörterbuch für die Schriftsprache der Gegenwart (1952)