Ż
Polish
Ż represents the voiced retroflex fricative [ʐ], similar to the pronunciation of ⟨g⟩ in "mirage". It usually corresponds to Ж or Ž in most other Slavic languages.
Its pronunciation is the same as the rz (digraph), the only difference being that ⟨rz⟩ evolved from a palatalized ⟨r⟩. It also sounds closer to Czech Ř.
Ż occasionally devoices to the voiceless retroflex fricative [ʂ], particularly in final position.
Ż should not be confused with ⟨Ź⟩ (or ⟨z⟩ followed by ⟨i⟩), termed "soft zh", the voiced alveolopalatal fricative ([ʑ]).
Examples of Ż
żółty (yellow)
żona (wife)
Compare ź:
źle (wrongly, badly)
źrebię (foal)
Occasionally, capital Ƶ (Z with horizontal stroke) is used instead of capital Ż for aesthetic purposes, especially in all-caps text and handwriting. It is common to see capital Ƶ with dot above, used to easily distinguish it from capital Z or Ź (Z with acute accent).
Emilian-Romagnol
Ż is used in Emilian-Romagnol to represent the voiced dental fricative [ð] (or, in some peripheral dialects, the affricates [dð~dz]), e.g. viażèr [vjaˈðɛːr] "to travel".
Kashubian
Kashubian ż is a voiced fricative like in Polish, but it is postalveolar ([ʒ]) rather than retroflex.
Maltese
In Maltese ż is pronounced like "z" in English "maze".
Computing codes
character | Ż | ż | ||
Unicode name | LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z WITH DOT ABOVE | LATIN SMALL LETTER Z WITH DOT ABOVE | ||
character encoding | decimal | hex | decimal | hex |
Unicode | 379 | 017B | 380 | 017C |
UTF-8 | 197 187 | C5 BB | 197 188 | C5 BC |
Numeric character reference | Ż | Ż | ż | ż |
CP 852 | 189 | BD | 190 | BE |
CP 775 | 163 | A3 | 164 | A4 |
Mazovia | 161 | A1 | 167 | A7 |
Windows-1250, ISO-8859-2 | 175 | AF | 191 | BF |
Windows-1257, ISO-8859-13 | 221 | DD | 253 | FD |
Mac Central European | 251 | FB | 253 | FD |