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れ, in hiragana, or レ in katakana, is one of the Japanese kana, each of which represents one mora. The hiragana is written in two strokes, while katakana in one. Both represent the sound [ɾe] . The shapes of these kana have origins in the character 礼. The Ainu language uses a small katakana ㇾ to represent a final r sound after an e sound (エㇾ er). The combination of an R-column kana letter with handakuten ゜- れ゚ in hiragana, and レ゚ in katakana was introduced to represent [le] in the early 20th century.[according to whom?]
re | |||
---|---|---|---|
| |||
transliteration | re | ||
hiragana origin | 礼 | ||
katakana origin | 礼 | ||
Man'yōgana | 礼 列 例 烈 連 | ||
spelling kana | れんげのレ Renge no "re" | ||
unicode | U 308C, U 30EC | ||
braille |
Form | Rōmaji | Hiragana | Katakana |
---|---|---|---|
Normal r- (ら行 ra-gyō) |
re | れ | レ |
rei ree rē |
れい, れぃ れえ, れぇ れー |
レイ, レィ レエ, レェ レー |
Stroke order
editOther communicative representations
editJapanese radiotelephony alphabet | Wabun code |
れんげのレ Renge no "Re" |
Japanese Navy Signal Flag | Japanese semaphore | Japanese manual syllabary (fingerspelling) | Braille dots-1245 Japanese Braille |
- Full Braille representation
れ / レ in Japanese Braille | |
---|---|
れ / レ re |
れい / レー rē/rei |
Preview | れ | レ | レ | ㇾ | ㋹ | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unicode name | HIRAGANA LETTER RE | KATAKANA LETTER RE | HALFWIDTH KATAKANA LETTER RE | KATAKANA LETTER SMALL RE | CIRCLED KATAKANA RE | |||||
Encodings | decimal | hex | dec | hex | dec | hex | dec | hex | dec | hex |
Unicode | 12428 | U 308C | 12524 | U 30EC | 65434 | U FF9A | 12798 | U 31FE | 13049 | U 32F9 |
UTF-8 | 227 130 140 | E3 82 8C | 227 131 172 | E3 83 AC | 239 190 154 | EF BE 9A | 227 135 190 | E3 87 BE | 227 139 185 | E3 8B B9 |
Numeric character reference | れ |
れ |
レ |
レ |
レ |
レ |
ㇾ |
ㇾ |
㋹ |
㋹ |
Shift JIS (plain)[1] | 130 234 | 82 EA | 131 140 | 83 8C | 218 | DA | ||||
Shift JIS-2004[2] | 130 234 | 82 EA | 131 140 | 83 8C | 218 | DA | 131 251 | 83 FB | ||
EUC-JP (plain)[3] | 164 236 | A4 EC | 165 236 | A5 EC | 142 218 | 8E DA | ||||
EUC-JIS-2004[4] | 164 236 | A4 EC | 165 236 | A5 EC | 142 218 | 8E DA | 166 253 | A6 FD | ||
GB 18030[5] | 164 236 | A4 EC | 165 236 | A5 EC | 132 49 155 52 | 84 31 9B 34 | 129 57 189 56 | 81 39 BD 38 | ||
EUC-KR[6] / UHC[7] | 170 236 | AA EC | 171 236 | AB EC | ||||||
Big5 (non-ETEN kana)[8] | 198 240 | C6 F0 | 199 166 | C7 A6 | ||||||
Big5 (ETEN / HKSCS)[9] | 199 115 | C7 73 | 199 232 | C7 E8 |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Unicode Consortium (2015-12-02) [1994-03-08]. "Shift-JIS to Unicode".
- ^ 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) - ^ Unicode Consortium; IBM. "EUC-JP-2007". International Components for Unicode.
- ^ 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) - ^ Standardization Administration of China (SAC) (2005-11-18). GB 18030-2005: Information Technology—Chinese coded character set.
- ^ Unicode Consortium; IBM. "IBM-970". International Components for Unicode.
- ^ Steele, Shawn (2000). "cp949 to Unicode table". Microsoft / Unicode Consortium.
- ^ Unicode Consortium (2015-12-02) [1994-02-11]. "BIG5 to Unicode table (complete)".
- ^ van Kesteren, Anne. "big5". Encoding Standard. WHATWG.