"'Ü'", or "'ü'", is a character which represents either a letter from several extended
Latin alphabets, or the letter '
U' with
umlaut or diaeresis.
Letter Ü
The letter 'Ü' occurs in the
Hungarian,
Turkish,
Estonian,
Azeri,
Turkmen, Crimean Tatar and
Tatar Latin alphabets, where it represents a
close front rounded vowel ().
This same letter appears in the
Chinese romanizations
pinyin,
Wade-Giles, and the German-based
Lessing-Othmer, where it represents the same sound: the vowel of 玉 (jade) and 雨 (rain). Pinyin uses ''Ü'' only when ambiguity could arise with similarly romanized words containing a ''U'', whereas Wade-Giles and Lessing use ''Ü'' in all situations.
U-umlaut
A similar glyph, 'U' with
umlaut, appears in the
German alphabet. It represents the umlauted form of ''u'', which results in the same sound as the letter ''Ü'' mentioned in the previous section: . The letter is
collated together with ''U'', or as ''UE''. In languages which have adopted German names or spellings, such as
Swedish, the letter also occurs. It is however not a part of these languages' alphabets. In
Swedish the letter is called ''tyskt y'' which means ''German y''.
In other languages that do not have the letter as part of the regular alphabet or in limited
character sets such as
ASCII, U-umlaut is frequently replaced with the two-letter combination "ue".
U-diaeresis
Several languages use
diaeresis over the letter 'U' to show that the letter is pronounced in its regular way, without dropping out, building
diphthongs with neighbours etc. For example,
Brazilian Portuguese combinations "gue" and "gui" are pronounced [ge], [gi] (the silent "u" is used to keep the sound [g], because "ge", "gi" mean [ʒe], [ʒi]), but "güe", "güi" mean [gue], [gui]: pingüim (penguin), agüentar (to bear, support); "ü" may also appear in "qüe": conseqüência (consequence), and in "qüi". In
Spanish, there exists a similar difference between "gue" and "güe": Camagüey.
Typography
Historically the unique letter ''Ü'' and U-diaeresis were written as a ''U'' with two dots above the letter. U-umlaut was written as a ''U'' with a small ''e'' written above: this minute ''e'' degenerated to two vertical bars in
medieval handwritings. In most later handwritings these bars in turn nearly became dots.
In modern
typography there was insufficient space on
typewriters and later
computer keyboards to allow for both a U-with-dots (also representing ''Ü'') and a U-with-bars. Since they looked near-identical the two glyphs were combined, which was also done in computer
character encodings such as
ISO 8859-1. As a result there was no way to differentiate between the three different characters. While
Unicode theoretically provides a solution, this is almost never used.
In Microsoft Windows, one can hold alt while pressing 0220 on the numeric pad as a shortcut to ''Ü'' and hold alt while pressing 0252 as a shortcut to ''ü''. One can also hold alt while pressing 666 as a shortcut to ''Ü''.
In Mac OS, one can hold alt while pressing u to obtain the dots and then u again (or any other desired vowel that shall receive the dots) to place it under the dots.
The
Unicode code point for ü is U+00FC. Ü is U+00DC.
The
HTML entity for ''Ü'' is Ü. For ''ü'', it is ü (
Mnemonic for "U umlaut").
See also
★
Umlaut (diacritic)
★
U with diaeresis (Cyrillic)