when simultaneously stressed and occurring either word-finally, before a vowel letter, before a single consonant letter, or before the consonant-letter groups kl, kr, pl, pr, tr, kj, tj, sj and those consisting of ð and one other consonant letter except for ðr when pronounced like gr (except as below) a rather open when directly followed by the sound , as in ræðast (silent ð) and frægari (silent g) in all other cases
One of its etymological origins is Old Norse é (the other is Old Norse æ), and this is particularly evident in the dialects of Suðuroy, where Æ is or :
æða (eider): Suð. , Northern Faroese ætt (family, direction): Suð. , Northern Faroese
as in æ (the name of the letter), bær, læring, æra, Ænes, ærlig, tærne, Kværner, Dæhlie, særs, ærfugl, lært, trær ("trees") as in færre, æsj, nærmere, Færder, Skjærvø, ærverdig, vært, lærd, Bræin (where æi is pronounced as a diphthong ) as in Sæther, Næser, Sæbø, gælisk, spælsau, bevæpne, sæd, æser, Cæsar, væte, trær ("thread(s)" (verb)) as in Sæth, Næss, Brænne, Bækkelund, Vollebæk, væske, trædd
use 'æ' as the definite article.]] In many western, northern, and southwestern Norwegian dialects, and in the western Danish dialects of Thy and South Jutland, the phoneme Æ has a significant meaning: the first person singular pronoun I, and it is thus a normally spoken word; usually, it is written as Æ when these dialects are rendered in writing. In Faroese, it is pronounced the same way, but it is written as eg.
In western and southern Jutish dialects of Danish, æ is also the proclitic definite article: 'æ hus' (the house), as opposed to Standard Danish and all other Scandinavian dialects which have enclitic definite articles (Danish, Swedish, Norwegian: huset, Icelandic: húsið (the house)). These dialects are rarely committed to writing but some dialect literature exists.
More off-standard, some Norwegian dialects may also render er (the present tense of the verb være, to be) as æ in writing.
The Danish and Norwegian 'Ӕ' is equivalent to the letter 'Ä' in the Swedish and Finnish alphabets and languages.
and ø) is accessible using AltGr+z on a modern US-International keyboard]]
When using the Latin-1 or Unicode/HTML character sets, the code points for Æ and æ are and , respectively.
;Cyrillic: There is also the Cyrillic and in Unicode ( and ; note the name being A IE), though in practice the Latin letters Æ and æ (U+00C6, U+00E6) are used in Cyrillic texts (such as on Ossetian sites on the Internet).
Category:Latin alphabet ligatures Category:Phonetic transcription symbols E E E E E Category:Old English language Category:Vowel letters Category:Uncommon Latin letters
als:Æ br:Æ (lizherenn) ca:Æ cs:Æ da:Æ de:Æ et:Æ es:Æ eo:Æ fr:Æ ko:Æ is:Æ it:Æ la:Æ nl:Æ (ligatuur) ja:Æ no:Æ nn:Æ pl:Æ pt:Æ ro:Æ ru:Æ fi:Æ sv:Æ tr:Æ uk:Æ zh:ÆThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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