Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 17, 2026

Dje

Dje is a letter of the Cyrillic script.

Last revised
Jul 17, 2026
Read time
≈ 2 min
Length
367 w
Citations
6
Source
Dje
Ђ ђ
Usage
Writing systemCyrillic
TypeAlphabetic
Language of originSerbo-Croatian
Sound values/d͡ʑ/
History
Development
TransliterationsĐ đ, Ď ď, Dj dj

Dje (Ђ ђ; italics: Ђ ђ) is a letter of the Cyrillic script.

Dje is the sixth letter of the Serbian Cyrillic alphabet and Montenegrin Cyrillic alphabet, used in Serbo-Croatian to represent the voiced alveolo-palatal affricate /d͡ʑ/.

Dje corresponds to the Latin letter D with stroke (Đ đ) in Gaj's Latin alphabet of Serbo-Croatian and is so transliterated. When strokes are unavailable, it is transliterated as ⟨Dj dj⟩ or ⟨Ď ď⟩.

History

Dje was constructed by request of Vuk Stefanović Karadžić.1 There were several proposed shapes of the letter (one by Pavle Solarić, another by Gligorije Geršić). The variant now in use was designed by Lukijan Mušicki;231 it was designed by modification of the letter Ћ, itself a revival of the old Cyrillic letter Djerv (Ꙉ).1 The new letter was adopted in Karadžić's 1818 dictionary and thus entered widespread usage.1 There was also a Д and Ь ligature variant that has not been added in Unicode as a character, and was used before Dje took its current form.

Computing codes

Character information
Preview Ђ ђ
Unicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER DJE CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER DJE
Encodings decimal hex dec hex
Unicode 1026 U+0402 1106 U+0452
UTF-8 208 130 D0 82 209 146 D1 92
Numeric character reference Ђ Ђ ђ ђ
Named character reference Ђ ђ
Code page 855 129 81 128 80
Windows-1251 128 80 144 90
ISO-8859-5 162 A2 242 F2
Macintosh Cyrillic 171 AB 172 AC
References

References

  1. Maretić, Tomislav. Gramatika i stilistika hrvatskoga ili srpskoga književnog jezika, p. 14-15. 1899.
  2. Lalević, Miodrag S. (1953). Potsetnik iz srpskohrvatskog jezika i pravopisa: s pravopisnim i jezičkim savetnikom. Rad. p. 75. Облик му је у Вуковој азбуци дао песник Лукијан Мушицки
  3. Петар Ђорђић. Историја српске ћирилице. Београд, 1971.
External links
  • The dictionary definition of Ђ at Wiktionary
  • The dictionary definition of ђ at Wiktionary