Mu (kana)

Mu (kana)

Character of the Japanese writing system


, in hiragana, or in katakana, is one of the Japanese kana, which each represent one mora. The hiragana is written with three strokes, while the katakana is written with two. Both represent [mɯ].

Quick Facts transliteration, hiragana origin ...

In older Japanese texts until the spelling reforms of 1900, む was also used to transcribe the nasalised [ɴ]. Since the reforms, it is replaced in such positions with .

In the Ainu language, ム can be written as small ㇺ, which represents a final m sound.[1] This, along with other extended katakana, was developed by Japanese linguists to represent Ainu sounds that do not exist in standard Japanese katakana.

More information Form, Rōmaji ...
More information Other additional forms, Rōmaji ...

Stroke order

Stroke order in writing む
Stroke order in writing ム
Stroke order in writing む
Stroke order in writing ム

Other communicative representations

  • Full Braille representation
More information む / ム in Japanese Braille ...
More information Preview, む ...

See also

  • (Radical 28)

References

  1. "Katakana Phonetic Extensions – Test for Unicode support in Web browsers".
  2. Unicode Consortium (2015-12-02) [1994-03-08]. "Shift-JIS to Unicode".
  3. Project X0213 (2009-05-03). "Shift_JIS-2004 (JIS X 0213:2004 Appendix 1) vs Unicode mapping table".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. Project X0213 (2009-05-03). "EUC-JIS-2004 (JIS X 0213:2004 Appendix 3) vs Unicode mapping table".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. Standardization Administration of China (SAC) (2005-11-18). GB 18030-2005: Information Technology—Chinese coded character set.
  6. van Kesteren, Anne. "big5". Encoding Standard. WHATWG.

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