, in hiragana, or in katakana, is one of the Japanese kana, each of which represents one mora. The hiragana is written in two strokes, while katakana in one. Both represent the sound [ɾe] . The shapes of these kana have origins in the character 礼. The Ainu language uses a small katakana ㇾ to represent a final r sound after an e sound (エㇾ er). The combination of an R-column kana letter with handakuten ゜- れ゚ in hiragana, and レ゚ in katakana was introduced to represent [le] in the early 20th century.[according to whom?]

re
hiragana
japanese hiragana re
katakana
japanese katakana re
transliterationre
hiragana origin
katakana origin
Man'yōgana礼 列 例 烈 連
spelling kanaれんげのレ Renge no "re"
unicodeU+308C, U+30EC
braille⠛
Form Rōmaji Hiragana Katakana
Normal r-
(ら行 ra-gyō)
re
rei
ree
れい, れぃ
れえ, れぇ
れー
レイ, レィ
レエ, レェ
レー

Stroke order

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Stroke order in writing れ
 
Stroke order in writing レ
 
Stroke order in writing れ
 
Stroke order in writing レ

Other communicative representations

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  • Full Braille representation
れ / レ in Japanese Braille
れ / レ
re
れい / レー
/rei
    
Character information
Preview
Unicode name HIRAGANA LETTER RE KATAKANA LETTER RE HALFWIDTH KATAKANA LETTER RE KATAKANA LETTER SMALL RE CIRCLED KATAKANA RE
Encodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hex dec hex
Unicode 12428 U+308C 12524 U+30EC 65434 U+FF9A 12798 U+31FE 13049 U+32F9
UTF-8 227 130 140 E3 82 8C 227 131 172 E3 83 AC 239 190 154 EF BE 9A 227 135 190 E3 87 BE 227 139 185 E3 8B B9
Numeric character reference れ れ レ レ レ レ ㇾ ㇾ ㋹ ㋹
Shift JIS (plain)[1] 130 234 82 EA 131 140 83 8C 218 DA
Shift JIS-2004[2] 130 234 82 EA 131 140 83 8C 218 DA 131 251 83 FB
EUC-JP (plain)[3] 164 236 A4 EC 165 236 A5 EC 142 218 8E DA
EUC-JIS-2004[4] 164 236 A4 EC 165 236 A5 EC 142 218 8E DA 166 253 A6 FD
GB 18030[5] 164 236 A4 EC 165 236 A5 EC 132 49 155 52 84 31 9B 34 129 57 189 56 81 39 BD 38
EUC-KR[6] / UHC[7] 170 236 AA EC 171 236 AB EC
Big5 (non-ETEN kana)[8] 198 240 C6 F0 199 166 C7 A6
Big5 (ETEN / HKSCS)[9] 199 115 C7 73 199 232 C7 E8

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Unicode Consortium (2015-12-02) [1994-03-08]. "Shift-JIS to Unicode".
  2. ^ 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)
  3. ^ Unicode Consortium; IBM. "EUC-JP-2007". International Components for Unicode.
  4. ^ 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)
  5. ^ Standardization Administration of China (SAC) (2005-11-18). GB 18030-2005: Information Technology—Chinese coded character set.
  6. ^ Unicode Consortium; IBM. "IBM-970". International Components for Unicode.
  7. ^ Steele, Shawn (2000). "cp949 to Unicode table". Microsoft / Unicode Consortium.
  8. ^ Unicode Consortium (2015-12-02) [1994-02-11]. "BIG5 to Unicode table (complete)".
  9. ^ van Kesteren, Anne. "big5". Encoding Standard. WHATWG.
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