(Redirected from У)
'U' (У, у) is a letter of the
Cyrillic alphabet, representing the vowel after non-palatalized (hard) consonants.
In some languages variations of this letter are used:
★
Ў with
breve (in
Belarusian,
Dungan[1],
Siberian Eskimo (Yuit),
Uzbek)
★ with
macron (in
Tajik)
★ with
diaeresis (in
Altai (Oyrot),
Khakas,
Gagauz,
Khanty,
Mari)
★ with
double acute accent (in
Chuvash)
★ straight
(in
Mongolian,
Kazakh,
Tatar,
Bashkir,
Dungan and other languages)
★ straight
with
bar (in
Kazakh)
History
Historically, this letter evolved as a specifically
East Slavic short form of the digraph
оу used in ancient
Slavic texts to represent . The digraph was itself a direct loan from the
Greek alphabet, where the combination
ου (
omicron-
upsilon) was also used to represent .
Consequently, the form of the letter is derived from Greek
upsilon, which was parallelly also taken over into the Cyrillic alphabet in another form, as
izhitsa (). (The letter izhitsa was removed from the
Russian alphabet in the
orthography reform of 1917/19.)
Footnotes
1. However, many Dungan books are in fact set using (with macron) instead of Ў with breve, e.g. the Dungan-Russian dictionary (1968). There is never an ambiguity, as this is the only У-with-a-diacritic in Dungan. It is used in Dungan syllables where pinyin would use ''-u'', except in those with labial consonants (i.e. in ''du'', ' ''nu'', ''lu'', ''gu'', ''hu'', ''zu'', ''ru'', etc., but not ''bu'' or ''mu'')