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J

Webpages concerning "J"

Unconventional Thought and Independent Journalism
http://www.keithjeffreys.com
Keywords:
film, documentary film, documentaries, movies, cinema, Mountain Meadows Massacre, religious hysteria, rules of engagement, rifles, scapegoat, Skeptics Society, Special Forces, Special Forces Airborne, Fith, Special, Forces, Group, 82d Airborne Division, U.S. Army, speculation, state, strategic, strategy, tactics, tactical, terror, unconventional warfare, Waco, Waco:, The, Rules, of, Engagement

http://www.keithjeffreys.com

An independent US reporter and photographer bringing news and photography of the occupation of Iraq back to his country. The truth in pictures and reality in words of the war in Iraq is often missed by mainstream media in the US. Dahr provides the Iraqi and US military perspective of the people actually in Iraq fighting the war.
http://www.dahrjamailiraq.com/
Keywords:
reporter, report, dispatch, unembedded, photos, photo, photography, pictures, picture, extreme, Iraq, war, torture, middle east, truth, reality, people, battle, news, reporter, independent, united states, us, alternative, activist, peace, images

http://www.dahrjamailiraq.com/

Website dedicated to the distinguished professional life of Gareth Jones, a young Welsh Journalist of worldwide repute, murdered in his prime by Chinese bandits in Manchukuo in 1935.
http://www.colley.co.uk/garethjones/
Keywords:
Gareth Jones, Manchukuo Incident, Manchukuo, Manchurian Incident, Siriol Colley, Margaret Colley, welsh journalist, bandits, chinese bandits, Kalgan, foreign office 1935, Lloyd George, chinese history, chinese embassy, japanese history, Manchukuo history, far east, manchuria, sino japanese war, 1935 news, japan occupies manchuria, japanese, invasion, of, manchuria, www.colley.co.uk/garethjones/

http://www.colley.co.uk/garethjones/

The website maintained by Margaret Jones, biographer and author of
http://www.margaretjones.com
Keywords:
Margaret Jones, biographer, Patsy Cline

http://www.margaretjones.com

Jeremy Josephs is an established journalist and author living in Montpellier, France. For the last 10 years he has specialised in writing about 'anything french'. With that in mind he has written several hundred articles about food and wine, of course, but he has also interviewed many of the top business people in France - in addition to writing about luxury products such as Chanel, Louis Vuitto...
http://www.jeremyjosephs.com/
Keywords:
jeremy josephs, freelance journalist france, bed, and, breakfast, montpellier, author, freelance, write, writer, writing, book, magazine, journal, periodical, international, united kingdom, england, english, france, french

http://www.jeremyjosephs.com/

Lynne d Johnson is a writer, cultural critic, and educator
http://www.lynnedjohnson.com
Keywords:
Lynne d Johnson, Lynne Johnson, Lynn Johnson, Lynn d Johnson, writer, critic, cultural critic, educator, media, hip-hop, hip hop, cyberculture, technology

http://www.lynnedjohnson.com

http://www.markjeffries.com

http://www.markjeffries.com

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Wikipedia-Article "J"

For the programming language, see J programming language.
J# redirects here due to technical limitations.


J
Latin alphabet
Aa Bb Cc Dd
Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj
Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo Pp
Qq Rr Ss Tt Uu Vv
Ww Xx Yy Zz

The letter J is the tenth of the Latin alphabet; it was the last to be added to that alphabet. Its name in English is jay. In the International Phonetic Alphabet, [j] represents the palatal approximant. It is also the only letter not to appear in the Periodic Table. On keyboards, the F and J keys generally have a raised bar (perceptible to the touch) over them to assist in touch typing. All other keys can be found with their relative positions around these two keys as the index finger is generally used to type the F and the J.

Contents

History

J was originally a capital of I.

Petrus Ramus (d. 1572) was the first to make a distinction between I and J. Originally, both I and J were pronounced (see IPA) as [i], [i:], and [j]; but Romance languages developed new sounds (from former [j] and [g]) that came to be represented as I and J; therefore, English J (from French J) has a sound quite different from I.

In other Germanic languages J stands for [j]. This is also true of Slavic languages that use the Latin alphabet as well as in Hungarian, Albanian, and Finnish, where it can never be a fricative.

In modern standard Italian only foreign or Latin words have J. Until the 19th century, J was used instead of I in diphthongs, as a replacement for final -ii, or in vowels groups (as in Savoja); this rule was quite strict for official writing. J is also used for rendering words in dialect, where it stands for [j], e.g. Romanesque ajo for standard aglio (garlic). The Italian Novelist Luigi Pirandello utilised J in vowels group in his works.

In Spanish J stands for [x ~ h] (which in some cases developed from the [dʒ] sound, i.e. the same sound that English still represents orthographically by <j>). In French former is now pronounced as [ʒ] (as in English measure).

In Portuguese, Turkish, Azeri and Tatar J is always prounced [ʒ].

Hebrew also influenced the English J, which in a few cases is used for [j] in place of the more normal Y. The classic example is Hallelujah which is pronounced the same as Halleluyah. See the Hebrew yod for more details.

Alternative representations

Juliet or Juliett represents the letter J in the NATO phonetic alphabet.

In international Morse code the letter J is DitDahDahDah: · - - -

In Braille the letter J is represented as (in Unicode), the dot pattern,

.X
XX
..

Computing

Meanings for J

J can also refer to:

Meanings for j

j can also refer to:

Regional meanings

See also


Two-letter combinations
Ja Jb Jc Jd Je Jf Jg Jh Ji Jj Jk Jl Jm Jn Jo Jp Jq Jr Js Jt Ju Jv Jw Jx Jy Jz
JA JB JC JD JE JF JG JH JI JJ JK JL JM JN JO JP JQ JR JS JT JU JV JW JX JY JZ
Letter-digit & Digit-letter combinations
J0 J1 J2 J3 J4 J5 J6 J7 J8 J9
0J 1J 2J 3J 4J 5J 6J 7J 8J 9J
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