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Trigraph (orthography)

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A trigraph (from the Greek words treis = three and graphein = write) is a group of three letters used to represent a single sound or a combination of sounds that does not correspond to the written letters combined. For example, in the word "schilling", the trigraph "sch" represents the voiceless postalveolar fricative /ʃ/. In the word night, "igh" represents the vowel /aɪ/ (a diphthong). Another example of a triphthong is "eau" in the English word beautiful, or in the French word château. The trigraph "sch" originates from German, where it is equivalent to the English "sh"; it is not regarded as an independent letter in German orthography. In Hungarian, the trigraph "dzs" is treated as a letter, with its own place in the alphabet. It is prononounced like an English "j" /dʒ/. Longer "multigraphs" are also known. It is quite possible that the longest one is an "octagraph" "schtschj" used in German language to represent a Russian language palatalized phoneme щь (which is represented by a digraph in Russian). According to the Peterburg phonetics school, this is not a regular phoneme of the Russian language, so the record may as well be attributed to the "heptagraph" "schtsch" for the phoneme щ as in the German spelling of the Slavic word borshch/borscht (Ukrainian/Russian spelling: борщ borshch, German spelling: Borschtsch).[1]

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Trigraph (orthography) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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