Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Ḍal

Letter of the Urdu alphabet, representing a voiced retroflex stop /ɖ/ From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Ḍal or ḍāl is a letter of the extended Arabic alphabet, derived from dāl (د) by placing a small t̤oʾe (ط; historically four dots in a square pattern, e.g. ڐ)[1] on top. It is not used in the Arabic alphabet itself, but is used to represent a voiced retroflex plosive [ɖ] in Urdu, Punjabi written in the Shahmukhi script, and Kashmiri as well as Balochi. The small t̤oʾe diacritic is used to indicate a retroflex consonant in Urdu. It is the twelfth letter of the Urdu alphabet. Its Abjad value is considered to be 4. In Urdu, this letter may also be called dāl-e-musaqqalā ("heavy dal")[1] or dāl-e-hindiyā ("Indian dal"). In Devanagari, this consonant is rendered using ‘’. It is also used in Beja language as its part of its Arabic alphabet of the Beja language.

More information Position in word:, Isolated ...
Remove ads

Character encoding

More information Preview, ڈ ...

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads