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๐›€†

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: ไปฅ, ใ„, and ใ‚
Thumb
๐›€† U+1B006, 𛀆
HENTAIGANA LETTER I-1
โ† ๐›€…
[U+1B005]
Kana Supplement ๐›€‡ โ†’
[U+1B007]

Japanese

Etymology 1

From man'yลgana kanji ไปฅ, written in cursive style.

Syllable

๐›€† โ€ข (yi or i) 

  1. (obsolete) The hentaigana syllable yi or i.

Etymology 2

Obsolete form of ใ„ (the current form of the Hiragana syllable i). Simplified from ไปฅ.

Syllable

๐›€† โ€ข (yi) 

  1. (linguistics) The hiragana syllable ๐›€† (yi). Its equivalent in katakana is ๐›„  (yi).
Usage notes
  • ๐›€† is a retrospective invention. It was invented sometime around the Meiji period and was not used in ancient Japanese literature (which uses man'yลgana instead) and thus is not included in the historical kana orthography.
  • ๐›€†'s scope of use is primarily confined to linguistics and represents a purely phonological way to specifically denote a spoken allophone rather than an underlying etymological phonemic distinction. Unlike ๐›€ /je/, phoneme /ji/ has never been prescriptive in the Japanese language at any point and has only ever existed as an allophone (although it may have been distinct in Proto-Japonic). Meiji era linguistics books delegate the use of ๐›€† primarily to a few specific cases:
    • ๐›€† โ† ใ: It likely could have represented /สi/ during the lenition of /k/ in some specific cases from older and literary ใ /ki/ to modern pronunciations of ใ„ /i/.
    • ๐›€† โ† ใ—: Like ๐›€† โ† ใ; lenition of /s/.
    • ๐›€† โ† ใ„: Because the Japanese language does not prescriptively include diphthongs and makes use of hiatus in all cases instead, some rapid transitions between another vowel and i, such as a to i, may sound stressed to the point of sounding like a semivowel palatal approximant (/j/) or fricative (/ส/).
  • Sound /ji/ reintroduced later is written as ใ„ใƒ in hiragana and ใ‚คใ‚ฃ in katakana; however, most speakers pronounce this as a long /i/ sound.
  • In Meiji era grammar books, ๐›€† was sometimes used to spell ใ‚„่กŒไธŠไธ€ๆฎตๆดป็”จ verbs, as well as ใ‚„่กŒไธŠไบŒๆฎตๆดป็”จ verbs. However, this was not universal; some books did this, while others did not.

See also

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