is used for in
German and other languages influenced by it such as
Low German and
Romansh. It is used for the
sje sound in
Swedish at the end of a French loanword; e.g., (fr. ), or in Greek loanwords, such as ("schedule") and . In
Walloon, it represents a consonant that is variously , , , or , depending on the dialect. In English, is usually used for , but the word ''
(from the Late Latin ) can be or depending on dialect. In Dutch, it may represent word-final , as in the common suffix -isch'' and in some (sur)names, like Bosch and
Den Bosch. In the
Rheinische Dokumenta, is used to denote the sounds , and , while with an arc below denotes . is used in
Italian for before , , . is used in
Bolivian Quechua for . is used in
Gwich'in for . represents a fricative phoneme in some
Scandinavian languages. In
Faroese (e.g. "to shoot") and in
Norwegian (e.g. "maybe"), it is a usually the voiceless postalveolar fricative . In
Swedish (e.g. "shirt") it is often realised as the
sje sound . is used for in English such as in
mission. It is used in a few French loanwords in
Swedish for the
sje sound , e.g. "dessert plate". is used for the
sje sound in a few Swedish words between two short vowels, such as "hayrack". is a long Hungarian , . It is collated as rather than as . It is only used within roots; when two are brought together in a compound word, they form the regular sequence . is found in words of Greek origin. In French, it is pronounced before a consonant, as in and ; in American English, it is pronounced in
isthmus and in
asthma. is used for the
sje sound in 5 native Swedish words, it can also represent the voiceless postalveolar fricative or the consonant cluster in
Norwegian depending on dialect. is used for in
Cantonese romanization. and are used for the sequence in
Piedmontese. and are used for the sequence in Piedmontese. ==T==