Zhje is used in the alphabets of the Dungan,12 Kalmyk,34 Tatar,567 Turkmen89 and Uyghur languages.
Zhje corresponds to the digraphs ⟨дж⟩ or ⟨чж⟩ used in other Cyrillic alphabets, or to the letters Che with descender (Ҷ ҷ), Che with vertical stroke (Ҹ ҹ), Dzhe (Џ џ), Khakassian Che (Ӌ ӌ), Zhe with breve (Ӂ ӂ), or Zhe with diaeresis (Ӝ ӝ).
Ager, Simon (ed.). "Dungan (хуэйзў йүян)". Omniglot: writing systems & languages of the world. Retrieved 2011-04-29. http://www.omniglot.com/writing/dungan.htm ↩
"Omniglot, Dungan". https://www.omniglot.com/chinese/dungan.htm ↩
Ager, Simon (ed.). "Kalmyk (Хальмг келн)". Omniglot: writing systems & languages of the world. Retrieved 2011-04-29. http://www.omniglot.com/writing/kalmyk.htm ↩
"Omniglot, Kalmyk". https://www.omniglot.com/writing/kalmyk.htm ↩
Ager, Simon (ed.). "Tatar (tatarça / татарча / تاتارچا)". Omniglot: writing systems & languages of the world. Retrieved 2011-04-29. http://www.omniglot.com/writing/tatar.htm ↩
"Omniglot, Tatar". https://www.omniglot.com/writing/tatar.htm ↩
"Cyrillic Unicode block" (PDF). https://unicode.org/charts/PDF/U0400.pdf ↩
Ager, Simon (ed.). "Turkmen (Türkmen dili / Түркмен дили)". Omniglot: writing systems & languages of the world. Retrieved 2011-04-29. http://www.omniglot.com/writing/turkmen.htm ↩
"Omniglot, Turkmen". https://www.omniglot.com/writing/turkmen.htm ↩
See the linked article for a description of the pronunciation. ↩
Bold face indicates the equivalent letter in the official Latin alphabet for the language. ↩