Also known as Shcha, Cyrillic Shcha, sh
thumb|Shcha, from the Alphabet Book оf the Red Army Soldier (1921). The illustration depicts (shchuk), "pike (fish)|pike" (acc. pl.). Shcha (Щ щ; italics: Щ щ or Щ щ; italics: Щ щ), Shta, or Scha is a letter of the Cyrillic script. In Russian, it represents the long (sometimes short) voiceless alveolo-palatal fricative , similar to the pronunciation of sh in 'sheep'. In Bulgarian, it represents the consonant cluster , like the pronunciation of “scht” in Borscht. In Ukrainian and Rusyn, it represents the consonant cluster . Most other non-Slavic languages written in Cyrillic use this
Щ (Shcha) is a letter of the Cyrillic script used in Russian, Bulgarian, Ukrainian, and other languages, representing various fricative and consonant cluster sounds similar to the "sh" sound in English. It matters because it is an essential character for correctly writing and pronouncing words in these Slavic languages.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
via Wikipedia infobox
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).