Citations:haček

variant of

 * 1956, International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature, The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature (International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature), volume 11, page 12
 * The library of the United States Congress have worked out their own transliteration system and although the “hačeks” does not figure in it, other diacritical signs are employed.
 * 1966, Charles Ernest Bazell et al. [eds.], In Memory of J.R. Firth (Longmans), page 205
 * Three other nouns — ndigiri (donkey), mocinga (gun), mokandá (rope) have tone patterns as indicated (in the system used here and elsewhere in this article for Bantu tone, low syllables are unmarked, high syllables have an acute accent, and rising syllables a haček respectively; thus a, á, ǎ).
 * 1967 July, The Bodleian Library Record (J. Johnson), volume VIII, number 1, page 3
 * Its keyboard includes a fair selection of the diacritical marks needed for cataloguing: the acute, grave, and circumflex accents, the cedilla, diæresis, short-sign, tilde, haček, and superscript circle.
 * 1972, Robert Hetzron, Ethiopian Semitic: Studies in Classification (Journal of Semitic Studies, monograph № 2; Manchester University Press, ISBN 071901123X, § U: “Converbial Constructions”, sub-§ U.1: ‘Definition of the Converb’, page 100
 * If it is used in the Serial function, its last syllable has the rising stress (marked here by a haček).
 * 1995, Milan Moguš, A History of the Croatian Language: Toward a Common Standard (Nakladni zavod Globus; ISBN 9531670498, 9789531670494), page 163
 * It seems, though, that Gaj’s incentive for the graphical shape of his letters was a native source. This can be seen in his use of the tilde rather than the “haček” (ˇ), as is often incorrectly claimed.
 * 1997, Victor A. Friedman, “Linguistic form and content in the Romani-language press of the Republic of Macedonia” in The Typology and Dialectology of Romani (Current Issues in Linguistic Theory CLVI; John Benjamins Publishing Company; ISBN 9027236615, 1556198728), edited by Yaron Matras, Peter Bakker, and Hristo Kyuchukov, page 185
 * RS follows standard East European practice of using the wedge (haček, čiriklo) to indicate the strident palatals (š, ž, č, ǆ).
 * 1998, Merriam-Webster’s Manual for Writers and Editors, page 170
 * Pinyin uses four diacritics (macron, acute accent, haček, and grave accent) to mark the four tones of Modern Standard Chinese.
 * 2006, Acta Orientalia (Munksgaard), volume 67, page 112
 * My transcription differs from that of Encyclopaedia lranica on the following points: I write j and c without haček; x and xw for ḵ and ḵʷ; q̇ for ġ; ei and ou for ey and ow; ɑ̂ for ā.
 * 2007, Peter George Oliver Freund, A Passion for Discovery, chapter 3: “A True Aristocrat”, page 18
 * Once I became aware that I had inadvertently made a mistake — I had put a hat where a haček was called for — but Stueckelberg didn’t notice.