we
hiragana
japanese hiragana we
katakana
japanese katakana we
transliterationwe
hiragana origin
katakana origin
Man'yōgana廻 恵 面 咲
spelling kanaかぎのあるヱ
Kagi no aru "we"
unicodeU+3091, U+30F1
braille⠖

in hiragana, or in katakana, is an obsolete Japanese kana. The combination of a W-column kana letter with "ゑ゙" in hiragana was introduced to represent [ve] in the 19th and 20th centuries.

It is presumed that 'ゑ' represented [we] , and that and indicated different pronunciations until somewhere between the Kamakura and Taishō periods, when they both came to be pronounced as 'イェ' [je] , later shifting to the modern 'エ' [e]. Along with the kana for wi ('ゐ' in hiragana, 'ヰ' in katakana), this kana was deemed obsolete in Japanese in 1946 and replaced with and . It is now rare in everyday usage; in onomatopoeia or foreign words, the katakana form 'ウェ' (U-[small-e]) is preferred, as in "ウェスト" for "west".

The kana still sees some modern-day usage. Ebisu is usually written as "えびす", but sometimes "ゑびす" like Kyoto Ebisu Shrine (京都ゑびす神社, Kyōto Webisu Jinja),[1] and name of the beer Yebisu (ヱビス), which is actually pronounced "Ebisu". The Japanese title of the Rebuild of Evangelion series is Evangelion: New Theatrical Edition (ヱヴァンゲリヲン新劇場版, Wevangeriwon Shin Gekijōban). Katakana is sometimes written with a dakuten, , to represent a /ve/ sound in foreign words; however, most IMEs lack a convenient way to write this, and the combination ヴェ is far more common. The Meiji-era Classical Japanese version of the Bible renders Jehovah as ヱホバ (Yehoba), and (ye) is also used to transcribe any Hebrew name spelled with Je in English (pronounced "ye" in Hebrew, though), such as Jephthah (ヱフタ, Yefuta); the modern Japanese version, on the other hand, only uses (e), hence エホバ (Ehoba) and エフタ (Efuta).

Hiragana is still used in several Okinawan orthographies for the syllable /we/. In the Ryūkyū University system, is also combined with a small (ゑぃ/ヱィ), to represent the sound /wi/. Katakana is used in Ainu for /we/.

Stroke order

Sign in Tokyo reading ゑびす (Webisu...)
Stroke order of both and
Animated Diagram
Animated gif showing the stroke order. The character is drawn similarly to the Arabic numeral '3', before a small loop is formed at the base of the character, and a small, squashed and italicised 'm' is drawn below as a base.
Stroke order in writing
Diagram showing the stroke order of the character: on the left, the finished character; on the right, a grayed-out version with small red arrows showing the stroke order, with a green dot showing the beginning point of the stroke.
Stroke order in writing
Animated gif showing the stroke order. The character begins with a stroke resembling a squashed version of the Arabic numeral '7', before a separate vertical line is drawn separately beneath it, and a horizontal line forming the base of the character drawn below it, attached.
Stroke order in writing
Diagram showing the stroke order of the character: on the left, the finished character; on the right, a grayed-out version with small red arrows showing the stroke order, with green dots showing the beginning points of each stroke.
Stroke order in writing

The hiragana is made with one stroke. It resembles a hiragana that continues with a double-humped shape underneath.

The katakana is made with three strokes:

  1. A horizontal line that hooks down and to the left.
  2. A vertical line, just grazing the end of the first stroke.
  3. A long horizontal line across the bottom.

Other communicative representations

  • Full Braille representation
ゑ / ヱ in Japanese Braille
ゑ / ヱ
we

ve
ゑい / ヱー
/wei
ヹー
/vei
⠖ (braille pattern dots-235) ⠐ (braille pattern dots-5) ⠖ (braille pattern dots-235) ⠖ (braille pattern dots-235) ⠒ (braille pattern dots-25) ⠐ (braille pattern dots-5) ⠖ (braille pattern dots-235) ⠒ (braille pattern dots-25)
Character information
Preview𛅑
Unicode name HIRAGANA LETTER WE KATAKANA LETTER WE HIRAGANA LETTER SMALL WE
Encodingsdecimalhexdechexdechex
Unicode12433U+309112529U+30F1110929U+1B151
UTF-8227 130 145E3 82 91227 131 177E3 83 B1240 155 133 145F0 9B 85 91
UTF-161243330911252930F155340 56657D82C DD51
Numeric character referenceゑゑヱヱ𛅑𛅑
Shift JIS[2]130 23982 EF131 14583 91
EUC-JP[3]164 241A4 F1165 241A5 F1
GB 18030[4]164 241A4 F1165 241A5 F1147 54 132 5193 36 84 33
EUC-KR[5] / UHC[6]170 241AA F1171 241AB F1
Big5 (non-ETEN kana)[7]198 245C6 F5199 171C7 AB
Big5 (ETEN / HKSCS)[8]199 120C7 78199 237C7 ED
Character information
Preview𛅥
Unicode name KATAKANA LETTER SMALL WE KATAKANA LETTER VE CIRCLED KATAKANA WE
Encodingsdecimalhexdechexdechex
Unicode110949U+1B16512537U+30F913053U+32FD
UTF-8240 155 133 165F0 9B 85 A5227 131 185E3 83 B9227 139 189E3 8B BD
UTF-1655340 56677D82C DD651253730F91305332FD
Numeric character reference𛅥𛅥ヹヹ㋽㋽
Shift JIS (KanjiTalk 7)[9]136 10888 6C
Shift JIS (JIS X 0213)[10]132 14884 94
EUC-JP (JIS X 0213)[11]167 244A7 F4
GB 18030[4]147 54 134 5193 36 86 33129 57 167 5581 39 A7 37

References

  1. 京都ゑびす神社
  2. Unicode Consortium (2015-12-02) [1994-03-08]. "Shift-JIS to Unicode".
  3. Unicode Consortium; IBM. "EUC-JP-2007". International Components for Unicode.
  4. 1 2 Standardization Administration of China (SAC) (2005-11-18). GB 18030-2005: Information Technology—Chinese coded character set.
  5. Unicode Consortium; IBM. "IBM-970". International Components for Unicode.
  6. Steele, Shawn (2000). "cp949 to Unicode table". Microsoft / Unicode Consortium.
  7. Unicode Consortium (2015-12-02) [1994-02-11]. "BIG5 to Unicode table (complete)".
  8. van Kesteren, Anne. "big5". Encoding Standard. WHATWG.
  9. Apple Computer (2005-04-05) [1995-04-15]. "Map (external version) from Mac OS Japanese encoding to Unicode 2.1 and later". Unicode Consortium.
  10. Project X0213 (2009-05-03). "Shift_JIS-2004 (JIS X 0213:2004 Appendix 1) vs Unicode mapping table".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  11. Project X0213 (2009-05-03). "EUC-JIS-2004 (JIS X 0213:2004 Appendix 3) vs Unicode mapping table".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

See also

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