diacritical mark From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A cedilla is a mark added to a letter of the alphabet. It is used in the orthographies of French, Portuguese and a few other languages, including many Turkic languages.[1]
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The cedilla is most commonly used with the letters 'c' and 's', but it is rarely used with other letters. When a 'c' has a cedilla, that means it is said like an s and not like a k.[1] This is called a soft c. In Turkic languages, it represents the sound of English cheese. When an 's' has a cedilla, it is said like the sound of English sheep.
Some examples of cedillas used with letters that are not 'c' or 's' are:
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