Na (Javanese)
ꦤ is one of syllable in Javanese script that represent the sound /nɔ/, /na/. It is transliterated to Latin as "na", and sometimes in Indonesian orthography as "no". It has another form (pasangan), which is ◌꧀ꦤ, but represented by a single Unicode code point, U+A9A4.[1][2][3]
ꦤ | |
na | |
Aksara nglegena | Aksara pasangan |
---|---|
Javanese script | |
Latin orthography | na |
Phoneme | [n] |
Unicode | U+A9A4 |
Pasangan
It's pasangan form ◌꧀ꦤ, is located on the bottom side of the previous syllable. For example, ꦩꦔꦤ꧀ꦤ - mangana (eat, imperative), which, although transliterated with a single 'n', is written using double 'ꦤ' because the rootword ('mangan', to eat) ends in 'ꦤ'.
Glyphs
Nglegena forms | Pasangan forms | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ꦤ na | ꦤꦃ nah | ꦤꦁ nang | ꦤꦂ nar | ◌꧀ꦤ -na | ◌꧀ꦤꦃ -nah | ◌꧀ꦤꦁ -nang | ◌꧀ꦤꦂ -nar |
ꦤꦺ ne | ꦤꦺꦃ neh | ꦤꦺꦁ neng | ꦤꦺꦂ ner | ◌꧀ꦤꦺ -ne | ◌꧀ꦤꦺꦃ -neh | ◌꧀ꦤꦺꦁ -neng | ◌꧀ꦤꦺꦂ -ner |
ꦤꦼ nê | ꦤꦼꦃ nêh | ꦤꦼꦁ nêng | ꦤꦼꦂ nêr | ◌꧀ꦤꦼ -nê | ◌꧀ꦤꦼꦃ -nêh | ◌꧀ꦤꦼꦁ -nêng | ◌꧀ꦤꦼꦂ -nêr |
ꦤꦶ ni | ꦤꦶꦃ nih | ꦤꦶꦁ ning | ꦤꦶꦂ nir | ◌꧀ꦤꦶ -ni | ◌꧀ꦤꦶꦃ -nih | ◌꧀ꦤꦶꦁ -ning | ◌꧀ꦤꦶꦂ -nir |
ꦤꦺꦴ no | ꦤꦺꦴꦃ noh | ꦤꦺꦴꦁ nong | ꦤꦺꦴꦂ nor | ◌꧀ꦤꦺꦴ -no | ◌꧀ꦤꦺꦴꦃ -noh | ◌꧀ꦤꦺꦴꦁ -nong | ◌꧀ꦤꦺꦴꦂ -nor |
ꦤꦸ nu | ꦤꦸꦃ nuh | ꦤꦸꦁ nung | ꦤꦸꦂ nur | ◌꧀ꦤꦸ -nu | ◌꧀ꦤꦸꦃ -nuh | ◌꧀ꦤꦸꦁ -nung | ◌꧀ꦤꦸꦂ -nur |
ꦤꦿ nra | ꦤꦿꦃ nrah | ꦤꦿꦁ nrang | ꦤꦿꦂ nrar | ◌꧀ꦤꦿ -nra | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦃ -nrah | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦁ -nrang | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦂ -nrar |
ꦤꦿꦺ nre | ꦤꦿꦺꦃ nreh | ꦤꦿꦺꦁ nreng | ꦤꦿꦺꦂ nrer | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦺ -nre | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦺꦃ -nreh | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦺꦁ -nreng | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦺꦂ -nrer |
ꦤꦽ nrê | ꦤꦽꦃ nrêh | ꦤꦽꦁ nrêng | ꦤꦽꦂ nrêr | ◌꧀ꦤꦽ -nrê | ◌꧀ꦤꦽꦃ -nrêh | ◌꧀ꦤꦽꦁ -nrêng | ◌꧀ꦤꦽꦂ -nrêr |
ꦤꦿꦶ nri | ꦤꦿꦶꦃ nrih | ꦤꦿꦶꦁ nring | ꦤꦿꦶꦂ nrir | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦶ -nri | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦶꦃ -nrih | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦶꦁ -nring | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦶꦂ -nrir |
ꦤꦿꦺꦴ nro | ꦤꦿꦺꦴꦃ nroh | ꦤꦿꦺꦴꦁ nrong | ꦤꦿꦺꦴꦂ nror | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦺꦴ -nro | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦺꦴꦃ -nroh | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦺꦴꦁ -nrong | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦺꦴꦂ -nror |
ꦤꦿꦸ nru | ꦤꦿꦸꦃ nruh | ꦤꦿꦸꦁ nrung | ꦤꦿꦸꦂ nrur | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦸ -nru | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦸꦃ -nruh | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦸꦁ -nrung | ◌꧀ꦤꦿꦸꦂ -nrur |
ꦤꦾ nya | ꦤꦾꦃ nyah | ꦤꦾꦁ nyang | ꦤꦾꦂ nyar | ◌꧀ꦤꦾ -nya | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦃ -nyah | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦁ -nyang | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦂ -nyar |
ꦤꦾꦺ nye | ꦤꦾꦺꦃ nyeh | ꦤꦾꦺꦁ nyeng | ꦤꦾꦺꦂ nyer | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦺ -nye | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦺꦃ -nyeh | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦺꦁ -nyeng | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦺꦂ -nyer |
ꦤꦾꦼ nyê | ꦤꦾꦼꦃ nyêh | ꦤꦾꦼꦁ nyêng | ꦤꦾꦼꦂ nyêr | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦼ -nyê | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦼꦃ -nyêh | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦼꦁ -nyêng | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦼꦂ -nyêr |
ꦤꦾꦶ nyi | ꦤꦾꦶꦃ nyih | ꦤꦾꦶꦁ nying | ꦤꦾꦶꦂ nyir | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦶ -nyi | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦶꦃ -nyih | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦶꦁ -nying | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦶꦂ -nyir |
ꦤꦾꦺꦴ nyo | ꦤꦾꦺꦴꦃ nyoh | ꦤꦾꦺꦴꦁ nyong | ꦤꦾꦺꦴꦂ nyor | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦺꦴ -nyo | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦺꦴꦃ -nyoh | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦺꦴꦁ -nyong | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦺꦴꦂ -nyor |
ꦤꦾꦸ nyu | ꦤꦾꦸꦃ nyuh | ꦤꦾꦸꦁ nyung | ꦤꦾꦸꦂ nyur | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦸ -nyu | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦸꦃ -nyuh | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦸꦁ -nyung | ◌꧀ꦤꦾꦸꦂ -nyur |
Unicode block
Javanese script was added to the Unicode Standard in October, 2009 with the release of version 5.2.
Javanese[1][2] Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) | ||||||||||||||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
U+A98x | ꦀ | ꦁ | ꦂ | ꦃ | ꦄ | ꦅ | ꦆ | ꦇ | ꦈ | ꦉ | ꦊ | ꦋ | ꦌ | ꦍ | ꦎ | ꦏ |
U+A99x | ꦐ | ꦑ | ꦒ | ꦓ | ꦔ | ꦕ | ꦖ | ꦗ | ꦘ | ꦙ | ꦚ | ꦛ | ꦜ | ꦝ | ꦞ | ꦟ |
U+A9Ax | ꦠ | ꦡ | ꦢ | ꦣ | ꦤ | ꦥ | ꦦ | ꦧ | ꦨ | ꦩ | ꦪ | ꦫ | ꦬ | ꦭ | ꦮ | ꦯ |
U+A9Bx | ꦰ | ꦱ | ꦲ | ꦳ | ꦴ | ꦵ | ꦶ | ꦷ | ꦸ | ꦹ | ꦺ | ꦻ | ꦼ | ꦽ | ꦾ | ꦿ |
U+A9Cx | ꧀ | ꧁ | ꧂ | ꧃ | ꧄ | ꧅ | ꧆ | ꧇ | ꧈ | ꧉ | ꧊ | ꧋ | ꧌ | ꧍ | ꧏ | |
U+A9Dx | ꧐ | ꧑ | ꧒ | ꧓ | ꧔ | ꧕ | ꧖ | ꧗ | ꧘ | ꧙ | ꧞ | ꧟ | ||||
Notes |
gollark: Actual implanted cybernetics are somewhat worrying because I don't really trust computers at this point, especially higher-performance ones.
gollark: All the cool people™ would run BrainLinux or something, and occasionally be blinded by incomprehensible driver problems.
gollark: You don't need *that*, just some method of projecting onto glasses in decent resolution without horrible focus problems, probably some way to blot out background too, and some kind of gesture control system (specialized gloves or radar maybe).
gollark: I imagine that phones will be replaced by AR glasses or something before an iPhone 47 ever happens, but who knows. Consumer AR stuff never seems to go anywhere.
gollark: It's entirely wireless.
References
- Campbell, George L. Compendium of the World's Languages. Vol. 1. New York: Routledge, 2000.
- Soemarmo, Marmo. "Javanese Script." Ohio Working Papers in Linguistics and Language Teaching 14.Winter (1995): 69-103.
- Daniels, Peter T and William Bright. The World's Writing Systems. Ed. Peter T Daniels and William Bright. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.
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