h U+0068, h
LATIN SMALL LETTER H
g
[U+0067]
Basic Latin i
[U+0069]

Translingual

edit
 
English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet.

See also

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • Pronunciation of IPA [hɑː, ɑhhɑː] with the sound [h]:(file)

Symbol

edit

h

  1. (IPA) a voiceless glottal fricative or approximant.
    (superscript ⟨ʰ⟩) (after a consonant) aspiration; (before a consonant) pre-aspiration; otherwise a weak, fleeting or epenthetic [h] – see ʰ.
  2. (UPA) a voiceless laryngeal approximant (IPA [h̞])
  3. (metrology) symbol for the prefix hecto-, indicating multiplication by 100
  4. symbol of the hour
  5. (italic) Planck's constant
  6. helion
  7. higgson
  8. (transcription) aspiration
    • 2006, Robin Wooffitt, “Analysing the Organization of Successful Demonstrations of Paranormal Cognition”, in The Language of Mediums and Psychics: The Social Organization of Everyday Miracles (in English), Ashgate Publishing, →ISBN, page 70:
      PP: ·hh⎡y’know-, / R: [I used it today Doris for the first time. / You used it today? / R: yea(huh)s (Smiling voice) / (0.3) / PP: t·hhhh And ah’ve another voice come, an’ she says, she’s just bought a new cooker you know. ·hh they know-, they get to know everythi:ng,
    • 2010, John Heritage, Steven Clayman, “Transcript Symbols”, in Talk in Action: Interactions, Identities, and Institutions (in English), →ISBN, pages 284 and 286:
      Bee: ·hhh Uh::, (0.3) I don’know I guess she’s aw- she’s awright she went to thee uh:: hhospital again tihda:y, [] Hearable aspiration is shown where it occurs in the talk by the letter h – the more h’s, the more aspiration. The aspiration may represent breathing, laughter, etc. If it occurs inside the boundaries of a word, it may be enclosed in parentheses in order to set it apart from the sounds of the word. If the aspiration is an inhalation, it is shown with a dot before it (usually a raised dot) or a raised degree symbol. Bee: [Ba::]sk(h)etb(h)a(h)ll? (h)(°Whe(h)re.) []
    • 2015, Simona Pekarek Doehler, Elwys De Stefani, Anne-Sylvie Horlacher, “The hanging topic construction as an interactional resource”, in Time and Emergence in Grammar: Dislocation, Topicalization and Hanging Topic in French Talk-in-Interaction (Studies in Language and Social Interaction; 28) (in English), John Benjamins Publishing Company, →ISBN, section 5 (Aphoristic HT formulations as closing devices), page 210:
      .hhhh (0.1) donc pour moi les hommes eu::h

Usage notes

edit

The UPA distinguishes glottal fricatives from glottal approximants. The voiceless and voiced fricatives ('spirants') are ȟ, , while the voiceless and voiced approximants ('semivowels') are h, ɦ.[1]

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Antti Sovijärvi & Reino Peltola, eds. (1970), Suomalais-ugrilainen tarkekirjoitus [Finnish-Ugric transcription], University of Helsinki, 5th edition.

See also

edit

Other representations of H:

English

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H, plural hs or h's)

  1. The eighth letter of the English alphabet, called aitch and written in the Latin script.
See also
edit

Number

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The ordinal number eighth, derived from this letter of the English alphabet, called aitch and written in the Latin script.

Etymology 2

edit

Abbreviations

Noun

edit

h

  1. (sciences) Abbreviation of hour (particularly when used as a (non-SI) unit of time alongside International System of Units (SI) units)
    • 1908, Francis Ernest Lloyd, The Physiology of Stomata, Carnegie Institution of Washington, page 83:
      Another instance: 2h28m p. m., 10 micra; 3h08m p. m., 0 micra; irrigated with water: 3h09m p. m., 4 micra.
  2. (baseball, in statistics) Abbreviation of hit, the number of hits by a player
  3. (slang) Abbreviation of heroin.
  4. (computing) Abbreviation of hexadecimal (following a number)
    • 1989, PC: The Independent Guide to IBM Personal Computers:
      If any of the video buffer's background attribute bits are on, MONO converts the attribute to 70h (inverse video).
    • 1994, Jan Axelson, The microcontroller idea book, page 47:
      The commands assume that the NV memory is addressed beginning at 8000h in external data memory.
  5. Abbreviation of home phone.

Verb

edit

h

  1. (stenoscript) Abbreviation of have and inflections having, had
    exception: hz 'has'

Etymology 3

edit

Adjective

edit

h (comparative more h, superlative most h)

  1. Alternative form of H

Derived terms

edit

See also

edit

Azerbaijani

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h lower case (upper case H)

  1. The eleventh letter of the Azerbaijani alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Basque

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): (Southern) /at͡ʃe/, [a.t͡ʃe̞]
  • IPA(key): (Northern) /hat͡ʃe/, [ɦa.t͡ʃe̞]

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Basque alphabet, called hatxe and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Dutch

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Dutch alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Egyptian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit
h
Z1
pr

 m

  1. The meaning of this term is uncertain. Possibilities include: [Pyramid Texts to New Kingdom]
    1. courtyard
    2. room, hall

Inflection

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Derived terms

edit

References

edit
  • hʾ (lemma ID 97220)”, in Thesaurus Linguae Aegyptiae[1], Corpus issue 18, Web app version 2.1.5, Tonio Sebastian Richter & Daniel A. Werning by order of the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften and Hans-Werner Fischer-Elfert & Peter Dils by order of the Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, 2004–26 July 2023
  • Erman, Adolf, Grapow, Hermann (1928) Wörterbuch der ägyptischen Sprache[2], volume 2, Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, →ISBN, pages 470.1–470.5
  • Faulkner, Raymond Oliver (1962) A Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian, Oxford: Griffith Institute, →ISBN, page 156
  • van der Molen, Rami (2000) A Hieroglyphic Dictionary of Egyptian Coffin Texts, Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill, →ISBN, page 293

Esperanto

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The tenth letter of the Esperanto alphabet, called ho and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Estonian

edit
 
Estonian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia et

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Estonian alphabet, called haa or hašš and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Faroese

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. The ninth letter of the Faroese alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Finnish

edit

Etymology 1

edit

The Finnish orthography using the Latin script was based on those of Swedish, German and Latin, and was first used in the mid-16th century. No earlier script is known. See the Wikipedia article on Finnish for more information, and h for information on the development of the glyph itself.

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Finnish alphabet, called hoo and written in the Latin script.
Derived terms
edit
compounds
See also
edit

Etymology 2

edit

German musical notation.

Noun

edit

h

  1. (music) B (note)
Usage notes
edit

Capitalized for the great octave or any octave below that, or in names of major keys; not capitalized for the small octave or any octave above that, or in names of minor keys.

Declension
edit
Derived terms
edit
compounds

French

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the French alphabet, written in the Latin script.

Derived terms

edit

Symbol

edit

h

  1. Used to indicate the hour in a time indication, either with or without following minutes.
    10h10:00 a.m.
    20h308:30 p.m.

Fula

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. A letter of the Fula alphabet, written in the Latin script.

Usage notes

edit

See also

edit

German

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Letter

edit

h

  1. the letter h, see H

Etymology 2

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

h

  1. (common, not restricted to scientific usage) hour
    15:30 h
    3:30 p.m.
    (read out as: fünfzehn Uhr dreißig, or halb vier)

Gothic

edit

Romanization

edit

h

  1. Romanization of 𐌷

Hawaiian

edit

Alternative forms

edit
  • (letter name)

Pronunciation

edit
  • (letter name) IPA(key): /ˈheː/
  • (phoneme) /h/

Letter

edit

h

  1. The sixth letter of the Hawaiian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Heiltsuk

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. A letter of the Heiltsuk alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Hungarian

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • (phoneme): IPA(key): [ˈx]
  • (letter name): IPA(key): [ˈhaː]

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The fourteenth letter of the Hungarian alphabet, called and written in the Latin script.
  2. (music) Alternative form of H (B, the seventh note in the C major scale, its symbol in writing or in print, or the equivalent key of a piano or stop of a stringed instrument)
Declension
edit
Inflection (stem in long/high vowel, back harmony)
singular plural
nominative h h-k
accusative h-t h-kat
dative h-nak h-knak
instrumental h-val h-kkal
causal-final h-ért h-kért
translative h-vá h-kká
terminative h-ig h-kig
essive-formal h-ként h-kként
essive-modal
inessive h-ban h-kban
superessive h-n h-kon
adessive h-nál h-knál
illative h-ba h-kba
sublative h-ra h-kra
allative h-hoz h-khoz
elative h-ból h-kból
delative h-ról h-król
ablative h-tól h-któl
non-attributive
possessive - singular
h-é h-ké
non-attributive
possessive - plural
h-éi h-kéi
Possessive forms of h
possessor single possession multiple possessions
1st person sing. h-m h-im
2nd person sing. h-d h-id
3rd person sing. h-ja h-i
1st person plural h-nk h-ink
2nd person plural h-tok h-itok
3rd person plural h-juk h-ik
Derived terms
edit
See also
edit
  • B, b (B-flat)

Etymology 2

edit

Abbreviation.

Pronunciation

edit

Conjunction

edit

h

  1. (Internet slang, text messaging) Abbreviation of hogy (that).

See also

edit

Further reading

edit
  • (h [sound or letter]): h in Bárczi, Géza and László Országh. A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára (“The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language”, abbr.: ÉrtSz.). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992: →ISBN
  • (B in music): h in Bárczi, Géza and László Országh. A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára (“The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language”, abbr.: ÉrtSz.). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992: →ISBN

Icelandic

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • (letter name) IPA(key): /hauː/

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. The tenth letter of the Icelandic alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • (context pronunciation) IPA(key): /h/
  • (letter name) IPA(key): /he/

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Ido alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Indonesian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Indonesian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Irish

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Prefix

edit

h

  1. marker of h-prothesis
    na habhannof the river
    fáilte go hÉirinnwelcome to Ireland
    chomh hard le crannas tall as a tree

Italian

edit

Letter

edit

h f or m (invariable, lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Italian alphabet, called acca and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Kankanaey

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Tagalog h. Letter pronunciation is influenced by English h.

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Kankanaey alphabet, called eyts and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

References

edit
  • Komisyon ng Wikang Filipino (2016) Ortograpiya di Kankanaëy [Kankanaey Orthography]‎[3] (in Kankanaey and Tagalog), →ISBN, pages 10-11

Kashubian

edit

Etymology

edit

The Kashubian orthography is based on the Latin alphabet. No earlier script is known. See the Kashubian alphabet article on Wikipedia for more, and h for development of the glyph itself.

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The twelfth letter of the Kashubian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Latin

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. A letter in the Latin alphabet, representing the sound /h/

See also

edit


Latvian

edit
 
Latvian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia lv

Etymology

edit

Proposed in 1908 as part of the new Latvian spelling by the scientific commission headed by K. Mīlenbahs, which was accepted and began to be taught in schools in 1909. Prior to that, Latvian had been written in German Fraktur, and sporadically in Cyrillic.

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit
 
H

h (upper case H)

  1. The twelfth letter of the Latvian alphabet, called and written in the Latin script.

Usage notes

edit

The letter H/h (like F/f, and O/o representing [o], [oː] instead of [uə̯]) is found only in words of foreign origin (borrowings). Note that it represents the sound of IPA [x] (like German machen, ach), not (as in most other alphabets based on the Latin script) the sound of IPA [h].

See also

edit

Livonian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. The twelfth letter of the Livonian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Lower Sorbian

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • Silent in most native words.
  • IPA(key): (in most loanwords and some native words) /h/

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. The eleventh letter of the Lower Sorbian alphabet, called ha and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Lushootseed

edit

Letter

edit

h

  1. The fourteenth letter of the Lushootseed alphabet, pronounced as a voiceless glottal fricative.

Malay

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Malay alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Maltese

edit

Etymology

edit

Continues Arabic ه (h). In pre-modern Maltese, h still produces the sound [h] as recorded by Agius de Soldanis (1750) and Mikel Anton Vassalli (1796). The early contemporary variant was first found in the dialect of lsien tal-bliet (“tongues of the cities”, referring to the cities around the Grand Harbour according to Vassalli) which eventually superseded the increasingly archaic [h] sound in the neighboring areas.

Pronunciation

edit
  • (phoneme) IPA(key): /-/, /ː/, /j/, /w/, /ħ/
  • (phoneme) IPA(key): /h/, /ħ/ (archaic)

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. The tenth letter of the Maltese alphabet, written in the Latin script.

Usage notes

edit
  • In contemporary Maltese, h remains a true consonant [ħ] in the following cases:
    • in word-final position or when being the last radical of a verb: ikrah [ˈɪkraħ], jixbhu [ˈjɪʃpħʊ];
    • before the negative ending -x: jarawhx [jaˈrawħʃ];
    • in the clusters -għh-, -ħh-, -hh-, which all become [ħħ].
  • Otherwise it is silent or leaves only a vocalic trace:
    • Following and preceding a, e, o are lengthened if stressed: hedded [ˈɛːddɛt], fehmet [ˈfɛːmɛt]. Other vowels are not affected.
    • In intervocalic position it is a glide, [j] after i, ie, and [w] after u: jibniha [jɪbˈnɪːja], inħobbuhom [ɪnħɔbˈbuːwɔm].
    • The sequence -aho- becomes [ɔː]: rahom [rɔːm]. The sequence -ehi- becomes [ɛj] or [ɛˈjiː]: ftehim [ftɛjm], [ftɛˈjiːm].
  • On the other hand in pre-modern Maltese dialects that preserved the guttaral sounds, h remained as a true consonant with the aspirated and soft sound of [h] in all positions except:
    • If word final h is an affixed pronoun: ħalluh [χal.lʊːħ], ħallih [χal.lɪːħ], fih [fɪːħ].
  • Phonotactically, word-initial h now generally behaves like a vowel, allowing contractions such as m’hemmx [mɛːmʃ]. However, word-internal h still behaves like a (virtual) consonant. Compare for example qablu [ˈʔablʊ] with qabilha [ʔaˈbɪla], which latter is formed as though the l were followed by a consonant.

See also

edit
edit

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. A letter of the Navajo alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

North Frisian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. A letter of the North Frisian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Norwegian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h

  1. The eighth letter of the Norwegian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

Usage notes

edit
  • When written before j, the h becomes silent.

Nupe

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The tenth letter of the Nupe alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Polish

edit

Etymology 1

edit

The Polish orthography is based on the Latin alphabet. No earlier script is known. See the history of Polish orthography article on Wikipedia for more, and h for development of the glyph itself.

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (upper case H, lower case)

  1. The eleventh letter of the Polish alphabet, called ha and written in the Latin script.
Usage notes
edit
  • Seemingly native words spelt with ⟨h⟩ (rather than ⟨ch⟩) are generally from Czech or other Slavic dialects. Otherwise ⟨h⟩ occurs in loanwords, especially from German. Some dialects distinguish between /x/ and /h/, but this is not part of standard Polish.
See also
edit

Etymology 2

edit

Derived from Latin hōra.

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

h f

  1. Abbreviation of godzina (hour).

Further reading

edit
  • h in Wielki słownik języka polskiego, Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
  • h in Polish dictionaries at PWN

Portuguese

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Name: see agá

Letter:

  • in most words: silent
  • in expressive terms and recent loanwords: IPA(key): /h/, [h], [ɦ], [ʁ]

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Portuguese alphabet, called agá and written in the Latin script.
    1. silent letter used mainly in words derived from Latin, Greek and other Romance languages; word-initial only
      hoje, hábito, hipnose, hoteltoday, habit, hypnosis, hotel
      1. (chiefly obsolete) silent letter used word-medially in loanwords
        coherente (now coerente)coherent
      2. (obsolete except in given names) used in the Hellenistic digraphs th, ph and rh
        thesouro (now tesouro), phalange (now falange), rheumatismo (now reumatismo), Cynthia (alongside Cíntia)treasure, phalanx, rheumatism, Cynthia
      3. (obsolete except in given names) used in words perceived to be Hellenisms
        thesoura (now tesoura), Nathaliascissors, Natalie
    2. represents /h/ in most recent loanwords from other languages, most commonly English
      hardcore, hacker, hall
      hardcore punk, hacker, entry hall
    3. used in the digraphs ch, lh and nh, where it indicates a palatal or post-alveolar pronunciation
      cheio, alho, banhofull, garlic, bath
    4. (obsolete) silent letter used word-initially in monosyllabic verbs with no attack
      hir (now ir), he (now é)to go, is
    5. silent letter used syllable-finally in some interjections
      ih! oh!uh oh! ooh!
    6. represents /h/ in some expressive terms
      hahaha! aham, hue huehahaha! yep, hehehe
    7. (chiefly Internet slang) used as a replacement for the acute or circumflex accent, or silent infinitive -r, indicating stress
      eh (standard é), Feh (standard ), fazeh (standard fazer)is, a nickname, to do
    8. (obsolete except in the word Bahia) silent letter used to mark some hiatus
      sahir (now sair), bahia (now baía)
      to leave, bay

See also

edit

Noun

edit

h f (invariable)

  1. Abbreviation of hora.
    1. used to indicate time in relation to a 24-hour clock
      O evento é hoje, às 20hThe event is today at 8 p.m.
      09h3009:30 a.m.
    2. used to indicate any sequence of time in hours
      O atleta completou a corrida em 1h20min45sThe athlete completed the race in 1 hour, 21 minutes and 45 seconds

Usage notes

edit
  • This abbreviation uses no spaces or points and must always follow a number (in its most common usage, a number between 0 and 23 to indicate the day's hours).
  • The abbreviation can be followed by a number between 00 and 59 to indicate the minutes of an hour (as in French). This can be optionally represented by another abbreviation: min.
    • Example: 15h30 or 15h30min, the first being much more common
  • min can be further followed by another abbreviation, s, to represent seconds.
    • Example: 20h43min08s

Romani

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. (International Standard) The tenth letter of the Romani alphabet, written in the Latin script.
  2. (Pan-Vlax) The eleventh letter of the Romani alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Romanian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The tenth letter of the Romanian alphabet, called haș, ha, or and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Scottish Gaelic

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Scottish Gaelic alphabet, written in the Latin script. It is preceded by g and followed by i. Its traditional name is uath (hawthorn).

See also

edit

Serbo-Croatian

edit

Alternative forms

edit
  • H (uppercase)

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (Cyrillic spelling х)

  1. The 12th letter of the Serbo-Croatian Latin alphabet (gajica), preceded by g and followed by i.

Silesian

edit

Etymology

edit

The Silesian orthography is based on the Latin alphabet. No earlier script is known. See the Silesian language article on Wikipedia for more, and h for development of the glyph itself.

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The tenth letter of the Silesian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Skolt Sami

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. The fifteenth letter of the Skolt Sami alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Slovene

edit
 
Slovene Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia sl

Alternative forms

edit

See usage notes for both etymologies.

Etymology 1

edit

From Gaj's Latin alphabet h, from Czech alphabet h, from Latin h. Pronunciation as /xə/ is initial Slovene (phoneme plus a fill vowel) and the second pronunciation is probably taken from German h.

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The ninth letter of the Slovene alphabet, written in the Latin script.
  2. The fourteenth letter of the Slovene alphabet (Resian), written in the Latin script.
  3. The tenth letter of the Slovene alphabet (Natisone Valley dialect), written in the Latin script.
Usage notes
edit

In Metelko alphabet, the phoneme was written by two different letters whether it was pronounced as velar /x/ or glottal /h/, a distinction irrelevant to nowadays standard and the distinction was also not used by all writers. Phoneme /h/ was written with 〈h〉, while /x/ was written with a yet to be encoded character  .

Symbol

edit

h

  1. (SNPT for Standard Slovene) Phonetic transcription of sound [x].
  2. (dialectal SNPT) Phonetic transcription of sounds [h, ħ].

Noun

edit

h m inan or f

  1. The name of the Latin script letter H / h.
  2. (linguistics) The name of the phoneme /x/.
Inflection
edit
  • Overall more common
First masculine declension (soft o-stem, inanimate) , fixed accent, -j- infix
nom. sing. h
gen. sing. h-ja
singular dual plural
nominative
imenovȃlnik
h h-ja h-ji
genitive
rodȋlnik
h-ja h-jev h-jev
dative
dajȃlnik
h-ju, h-ji h-jema h-jem
accusative
tožȋlnik
h h-ja h-je
locative
mẹ̑stnik
h-ju, h-ji h-jih h-jih
instrumental
orọ̑dnik
h-jem h-jema h-ji
(vocative)
(ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik)
h h-ja h-ji
  • More common when with a definite adjective
Third masculine declension (no endings) , fixed accent
nom. sing. h
gen. sing. h
singular dual plural
nominative
imenovȃlnik
h h h
genitive
rodȋlnik
h h h
dative
dajȃlnik
h h h
accusative
tožȋlnik
h h h
locative
mẹ̑stnik
h h h
instrumental
orọ̑dnik
h h h
(vocative)
(ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik)
h h h
  • Dialectal, in common written language used till 19th century
First masculine declension (hard o-stem, inanimate) , -j- infix
nom. sing. h
gen. sing. h-ja
singular dual plural
nominative
imenovȃlnik
h h-ja h-ji
genitive
rodȋlnik
h-ja h-jov h-jov
dative
dajȃlnik
h-ju, h-ji h-joma h-jom
accusative
tožȋlnik
h h-ja h-je
locative
mẹ̑stnik
h-ju, h-ji h-jih h-jih
instrumental
orọ̑dnik
h-jom h-joma h-ji
(vocative)
(ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik)
h h-ja h-ji
  • Rare
Third feminine declension (no endings) , fixed accent
nom. sing. h
gen. sing. h
singular dual plural
nominative
imenovȃlnik
h h h
genitive
rodȋlnik
h h h
dative
dajȃlnik
h h h
accusative
tožȋlnik
h h h
locative
mẹ̑stnik
h h h
instrumental
orọ̑dnik
h h h
(vocative)
(ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik)
h h h

Etymology 2

edit

From Proto-Slavic *kъ 'to', which is itself probably from Proto-Indo-European *ku 'where'. This form is a spirantization of k, which appeared to ease the pronunciation.

Pronunciation

edit

Preposition

edit

h

  1. (with dative, see usage notes) to, for
Usage notes
edit

Preposition h is a form of preposition k that appears before words that start with /k/ or /ɡ/ while other form is used for all other words. In "correct" pronunciation, the preposition does not form its own syllable, but binds to the first syllable of the next word and has therefore two pronunciations: [x] if word starts with [k] and [ɣ] if word starts with [ɡ]. In colloquial speech, this form (or at least its pronunciation) are also used with words starting with other letters.

See also

edit

References

edit
  • Kenda-Jež, Karmen (2017 February 27) Fonetična trankripcija [Phonetic transcription]‎[4] (in Slovene), Znanstvenoraziskovalni center SAZU, Inštitut za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša, archived from the original on January 22, 2022, pages 27–30

Further reading

edit
  • h”, in Slovarji Inštituta za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša ZRC SAZU (in Slovene), 2014–2024

Spanish

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Spanish alphabet, written in the Latin script.

Derived terms

edit

Swedish

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Swedish alphabet, written in the Latin script.

Noun

edit

h

  1. (nonstandard, anglicism) Abbreviation of hour from English.
    Synonyms: timme, tim.
  2. (strictly technology) Abbreviation of hora from Latin.
    Synonyms: timme, tim.
  3. (music) B, note with a frequency close to 493.88 · 2n Hz
    Synonym: (anglicism) b

Tagalog

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Spanish h. Each pronunciation has a different source:

  • Filipino alphabet pronunciation is influenced by English h.
  • Abakada alphabet pronunciation is influenced by Baybayin character (ha).
  • Abecedario pronunciation is from Spanish h.

Pronunciation

edit
  • (Standard Tagalog)
    • IPA(key): /ˈʔejt͡ʃ/ [ˈʔeɪ̯t͡ʃ] (letter name, Filipino alphabet)
      • IPA(key): (no yod coalescence) /ˈʔejts/ [ˈʔeɪ̯t̪s] (letter name, Filipino alphabet)
      • Rhymes: -ejt͡ʃ (letter name, Filipino alphabet), (no yod coalescence) -ejts (letter name, Filipino alphabet)
    • IPA(key): /ˈha/ [ˈha] (letter name, Abakada alphabet)
      • Rhymes: -a
    • IPA(key): /ˈʔat͡ʃe/ [ˈʔaː.t͡ʃɛ] (letter name, Abecedario)
      • IPA(key): (no yod coalescence) /ˈʔatse/ [ˈʔat̪.sɛ] (letter name, Abecedario)
      • Rhymes: -at͡ʃe (letter name, Abecedario), (no yod coalescence) -atse (letter name, Abecedario)
    • IPA(key): /h/ [h] (phoneme; silent in Spanish unadapted loanwards)

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H, Baybayin spelling ᜁᜌ᜔ᜆ᜔ᜐ᜔)

  1. The eighth letter of the Tagalog alphabet (the Filipino alphabet), called eyts and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H, Baybayin spelling )

  1. The seventh letter of the Tagalog alphabet (the Abakada alphabet), called ha and written in the Latin script.

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H, Baybayin spelling ᜀᜆ᜔ᜐᜒ)

  1. (historical) The ninth letter of the Tagalog alphabet (the Abecedario), called hache and written in the Latin script.

Usage notes

edit
  • Over time, some of the loaned Spanish words still spelled with the silent ⟨h⟩ are spoken with /h/ due to spelling pronunciation, as people are becoming less aware of the letter being silent.

See also

edit

Further reading

edit
  • h”, in Pambansang Diksiyonaryo | Diksiyonaryo.ph, Manila, 2018

Tlingit

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. A letter of the Tlingit alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Turkish

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • (letter name) IPA(key): (standard) /ˈheː/, /ˈhaʃ/
  • (phoneme) IPA(key): /h/, [ç]

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The tenth letter of the Turkish alphabet, called he and written in the Latin script.

Usage notes

edit
  • See H.

See also

edit


Turkmen

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (upper case H)

  1. The ninth letter of the Turkmen alphabet, called he and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Welsh

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Prefix

edit

h

  1. marker of h-prothesis
    ei hiaithher language
    i’n heglwysto our church
    un ar hugaintwenty-one

Yoruba

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The ninth letter of the Yoruba alphabet, called and written in the Latin script.

See also

edit

Zulu

edit

Letter

edit

h (lower case, upper case H)

  1. The eighth letter of the Zulu alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

edit
pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy