H with stroke

Letter "Ħ"

Ħ (minuscule: ħ) is a letter of the Latin alphabet, derived from H with the addition of a bar. It can be referred to as "H with stroke", "H with bar", or just "H-bar".

Maltese

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A Maltese sign showing the use of Ħ both as its own letter and as part of the GĦ digraph

Ħ is a letter used in the Maltese language, where it has two roles. An ħ by itself represents a voiceless pharyngeal fricative consonant. This sound is similar to an English h sound, but is made higher in the throat.[1]: 13  Lowercase [ħ] is used in the International Phonetic Alphabet for the same sound.[2] It is a common sound in the Semitic languages, of which Maltese is a member. It corresponds to the letter heth of other Semitic abjads (Arabic: ح, Hebrew: ח).[citation needed]

The other Maltese use for ħ is in the digraph għ, whose pronunciation is complex. Historically, the digraph stood for a voiced velar or pharygneal fricative ([ɣ] or [ʕ] in IPA) in medieval Maltese. The sounds have been lost from all but the most conservative Maltese dialects, so the digraph is generally silent in modern Maltese. However, vowel changes caused by these fricatives in older forms of Maltese persist; as such, the għ digraph often marks a vowel change.[1]: 14 [3]: 7, 40–44 

A white uppercase Ħ on a red square was the logo of Heritage Malta until a 2022 rebrand.[4][5]

Other uses

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Perez de Ayala's (1556) version of Lord Prayer in Spanish and Andalusian Arabic, page 18. Compare to Maltese:
ħobżna ta' kuljum agħtihulna llum.

An early use of this letter is found in the 1556 work of Pérez de Ayala, slightly modified from Pedro de Alcalá's Vocabulary.[6]

Ħ was also added to the alphabet of the constructed language Volapük, to represent the dental fricative sounds [θ] and [ð] (English "th").[7]: 13 

Similar characters in other writing systems

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The lowercase ħ looks like the lowercase Serbian Cyrillic letter Tshe (ћ).[8] It also looks like the mathematical symbol for the reduced Planck constant, , also known as "h-bar".[9]: 336 This symbol, in turn, is used as the symbol for Hedera Hashgraph's cryptocurrency, HBAR.[10]

It superficially resembles the astronomical symbol for Saturn (♄),[11] later used in the alchemical symbol representing lead.[12] However, the astronomical/alchemical symbol has a curve on the rightmost stroke that the ħ lacks.

Computer encoding

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Ħ ħ
Name LATIN CAPITAL LETTER H WITH STROKE LATIN SMALL LETTER H WITH STROKE
Unicode U+0126 U+0127
Latin-3 A1 B1
HTML Character Reference Ħ ħ

The letters Ħ and ħ should be displayable on most of today's computers. They were a part of WGL-4 already in 2001.[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Aquilina, Joseph (1980). Maltese: A complete course for beginners (5th ed.). Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0340058056. Retrieved 15 January 2026.
  2. ^ "The International Phonetic Alphabet" (PDF). International Phonetic Association. 2026. Retrieved 15 January 2026.
  3. ^ Puech, Gilbert (2018). "Loss of emphatic and guttural consonants: From medieval to contemporary Maltese". In Paggio, Patrizia; Gatt, Albert (eds.). The Languages of Malta. Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.1181783. ISBN 978-3-96110-070-5. Retrieved 15 January 2026.
  4. ^ "Heritage Malta 2020 Annual Report" (PDF). 11 December 2021.
  5. ^ "'Part of Us' - Heritage Malta launches its new brand identity". Heritage Malta. Retrieved 15 January 2026.
  6. ^ Pérez de Ayala, Martín (1556). Christian doctrine in the Arabic-Spanish language. Valencia.
  7. ^ Post, Alfred A. (1890). Comprehensive Volapük grammar. Mattapan, Mass. Retrieved 15 January 2026.
  8. ^ Campbell, George L.; Moseley, Christopher (2013). The Routledge Handbook of Scripts and Alphabets (2nd ed.). Routledge. p. 85. ISBN 978-1135222963.
  9. ^ Chabay, Ruth W.; Sherwood, Bruce A. (20 November 2017). Matter and Interactions. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-119-45575-2. Retrieved 15 January 2026.
  10. ^ "Brand Guidelines". Hedera.
  11. ^ "Solar System Symbols". NASA Science. 30 January 2018. Retrieved 15 January 2026.
  12. ^ The Getty Research Institute (2016). "Alchemical Symbols" (PDF). The Art of Alchemy Exhibit (October 11, 2016–February 12, 2017). Retrieved 15 January 2026.
  13. ^ "WGL4 character set U+00BC to U+017E". Archived from the original on 2001-05-02.

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