Design of the Cyrillic letter Qa /Ԛ /ԛ

The Cyrillic letter Qa /Ԛ /ԛ has multiple forms, according to it’s Wikipedia page. It doesn’t explain when the different variants are used though (like how the double-storey /g is often used in humanist typefaces or how /Д has a localized form for Bulgarian). The text just says it changes “depending on font”. Does anyone know why?

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  • John Hudson
    John Hudson Posts: 3,380
    I don’t recall seeing it taking any form other than that of the corresponding Latin Q/q. It and the Wa W/w are both straight borrowings from the Latin script. Any idiosyncratic forms were likely typeface-specific and not generaralised to any kind of pattern of use.
  • Igor Freiberger
    Igor Freiberger Posts: 289
    edited May 15
    It seems the English Wikipedia article for Cyrillic Q/q is plainly wrong. It's a low quality article with only one reference —and it points to a proposal where there is no alternative Q/q.
    This letter is not in use anymore. It was only present in Kurdish, but in a previous version of the alphabet. It was also used in older Ossetian and Abkhazian from the pre-Soviet era. Thus samples and information are sparse. One can check the same article in Wikipedia with other languages, where there is no mention to an alternative Q/q.
    Maybe the Wikipedia author misread the table from the proposal (bottom of page 24) where there is a glyph resembling a reversed P, but it was part of old Armenian-Kurdish alphabet, not a Cyrillic variation. Some confusion with ƣ, used in Kazakhstan in 1930s, is also possible.
  • Thank you all for the clarification! This is starting to make sense now—and exactly what I was hoping to learn :)
  • Tural Alisoy
    Tural Alisoy Posts: 57
    You can use it as Q with ease. As shown on Wikipedia, its phonetic value and historical evolution support this usage.
  • John Hudson
    John Hudson Posts: 3,380
    Was hoping @Denis Moyogo Jacquerye would chime in. :)