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Ґ, ґ
Ґ, ґ
Ghe (Ґ, ґ, also called "ge with upturn") is a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet pronounced like the G in "go".
Originally part of the Ukrainian and Belarusian alphabets, its function was replaced by the letter Ge (Г) in the Soviet Union.
In Ukrainian, it continued to be used by the diaspora, and has been reintroduced since Ukraine's independence.
Its reintroduction into Belarusian has been proposed by some linguists.
| Cyrillic alphabet | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| А A |
Б Be |
В Ve |
Г Ge |
Ѓ Gje |
Ґ Ghe |
Д De |
Ђ Dje |
Е E |
Є Ukrainian E |
Ѐ E with grave |
Ё Yo |
Ж Zhe |
| Ѕ Dze |
З Ze |
И I |
Й short I |
Ѝ I with grave |
І Ukrainian I |
Ї Yi |
Ј Je |
К Ka |
Ќ Kje |
Л El |
Љ Lje |
М Em |
| Н En |
Њ Nje |
О O |
П Pe |
Р Er |
С Es |
Т Te |
Ћ Tshe |
Ѹ Ou |
У U |
Ў U short |
Ф Ef |
Х Ha |
| Ѡ Omega Cyrillic |
Ц Tse |
Ч Che |
Џ Dzhe |
Ш Sha |
Щ Shcha |
Ъ Hard sign (yer) |
Ы Yery |
Ь Soft sign |
Ѣ Yat |
Э E reversed |
Ю Yu |
Я Ya |
| ɾa (not in Unicode) A iotified |
Ѥ E iotified |
Ѧ Yus small |
Ѫ Yus big |
Ѩ Yus small iotified |
Ѭ Yus big iotified |
Ѯ Ksi Cyrillic |
Ѱ Psi Cyrillic |
Ѳ Fita |
Ѵ Izhitsa |
Ѷ Izhitsa with double grave |
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(Russian letters bolded; old letters italics)