- The 25th letter of the modern English alphabet.
- Any of the speech sounds represented by the letter y.
- The 25th in a series.
- Something shaped like the letter Y.
y2
The symbol for ordinate.
Did you mean: y (in linguistics), Y? (abbreviation), Y, Alleghany Corp, Y (investment), Y, Ȳ, IJ (body of water, the Netherlands), Puneet Y (Blogger), Generation Y (generation)
Dictionary:
y1 or Y (wī) ![]() |
The symbol for ordinate.
(1) Refers to the brightness signal (luma) in the YUV color space. See YUV.
(2) An abbreviation of Yes, commonly used in conjunction with N for No; for example, a prompt may ask you: Do you want to overwrite the file: y/n?
(3) The symbol typically used for output of a combinational logic circuit. See combinational logic.
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| Columbia Encyclopedia: Y |
| Wikipedia: Y |
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| Look up Y or y in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
| Basic Latin alphabet | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aa | Bb | Cc | Dd | ||
| Ee | Ff | Gg | Hh | ||
| Ii | Jj | Kk | Ll | Mm | Nn |
| Oo | Pp | Rr | Ss | Tt | |
| Uu | Vv | Ww | Xx | Yy | Zz |
The letter Y is the twenty-fifth and penultimate letter in the basic modern Latin alphabet. Its name in English (pronounced /ˈwaɪ/) is spelled wye or occasionally wy, plural wyes.[1]
Contents |
The original ancestor of Y was the Semitic letter Waw, which was also the ultimate origin of the modern letters F, U, V, and W. See F for details.
In Ancient Greek, Υ (Upsilon) represented IPA: [/u/], and was borrowed by the Romans as the letter V to represent both the vowel /u/ and the consonant /w/. In later times, the pronunciation of the Greek letter shifted to /y/, and the Romans borrowed it again, as Y, to represent the new sound — mainly in names and words taken from Greek.
The letter Y was used in Old English, as in Latin, to represent /y/; however, some claim that this use was a type-setters' substitution for an old runic letter Yogh, unrelated to the Latin use of the letter. Regardless, it is fairly likely that the letter, although technically named Y Græca (pronounced [ˈuː ˈɡraɪka]) "Greek u" in contradistinction from native Latin /uː/, came to be analyzed as the letter V (called /uː/) atop the letter I (called /iː/). Such an analysis is made explicit in the First Grammatical Treatise. The letter was thus referred to as /uː iː/,[citation needed] which fused to /wiː/ and after English's Great Vowel Shift became /waɪ/.
By Middle English, /y/ had lost its roundedness and merged with /i/, and Y came to be used with the same values as I, /iː/ and /ɪ/ as well as /j/. Those dialects that retained /y/ spelled it with U, under French influence.
The Modern English use of Y is a direct continuation of this Middle English use, although eventually vocalic Y became essentially restricted to three contexts: word-final (e.g. city; cf. the plural cities); representing upsilon in borrowings from Greek (e.g. system); and in some words from monosyllabic stems before a vowel (e.g. rye, and dying.)[2]. Y remains the standard spelling of the consonant /j/.
Thus the words myth [of Greek origin] and gift [of Old English origin], which originally contained high front rounded vowels, both have [ɪ].
With the introduction of printing, the letter Y was used by Caxton and other printers in England to represent the letter thorn (Þ, þ) which was lacking from continental typefaces, resulting in the use of ye for the word the. The pronunciation always remained /ði/ (stressed), /ðə/ (unstressed); the occasionally encountered /ji/ is purely a modern spelling pronunciation.
In Spanish, Y is called i/y griega, in Catalan i grega, in French and Romanian i grec, in Polish igrek - all meaning "Greek i" (except for Polish, where it is simply a phonetic transcription of the French name); in most other European languages the Greek name is still used; in German, for example, it is called Ypsilon (or also sometimes spelt "Üpsilon") and in Portuguese and Italian it's called ípsilon or ípsilo (although in Portuguese there is also the name "Greek i"). [1] The letter Y was originally established as a vowel. In the standard English language, the letter Y is traditionally regarded as a consonant, but a survey of almost any English text will show that Y more commonly functions as a vowel. In many cases, it is known as a semivowel.
After fronting from /u/, Greek /y/ de-rounded to /i/.
In English morphology, -y is a diminutive suffix.
When not serving as the second vowel in a diphthong, it has the sound value /y/ in the Scandinavian languages and /ʏ/ in German. Y can never be a consonant (except for loanwords), but in diphthongs, as in the name Meyer, it serves as a variant of "i".
In Dutch, Y appears only in loanwords and names and usually represents /i/. It is often left out of the Dutch alphabet and replaced with the "ligature IJ". In Afrikaans, a development of Dutch, Y denotes the diphthong [ɛi], probably as a result of mixing lower case i and y or may derive from the IJ ligature.
In the Spanish language, Y was used as a word-initial form of I that was more visible. (German has used J in a similar way.) Hence "el yugo y las flechas" was a symbol sharing the initials of Isabella I of Castille (Ysabel) and Ferdinand II of Aragon. This spelling was reformed by the Royal Spanish Academy and currently is only found in proper names spelt archaically, such as Ybarra or CYII, the symbol of the Canal de Isabel II. X is also still used in Spanish with a different sound in some archaisms.
Appearing alone as a word, the letter Y is a grammatical conjunction with the meaning "and" in Spanish and is pronounced /i/. In Spanish family names, y can separate the father's surname from the mother's surname as in "Santiago Ramón y Cajal"; another example is "Maturin y Domanova", from the Jack Aubrey novel sequence. Catalan names use i for this. Otherwise, Y represents /ʝ/ in Spanish. When coming before the sound /i/, Y is replaced with E: "español e inglés". This is to avoid pronouncing /i/ twice.
The letter Y is called "i/y griega", "Greek I", after the Greek letter ypsilon. Although in disuse nowadays, it was also called "ye", pronounced /ʝe/.
Italian, too, has Y (i greca or ipsilon) in a small number of loanwords.
In Polish and Guaraní, it represents the close central unrounded vowel (IPA: /ɨ/)
In Finnish and Albanian, Y is always pronounced /y/.
In Lithuanian Y is the 15th letter and is a vowel. It is called the long i and is pronounced /i:/ like in English see.
In Faroese and Icelandic, it's always pronounced i. It can also be the part of diphthongs: ey and oy (Faroese only).
In contrast, in the Latin transcription of Nenets (Nyenec) the letter "y" palatalizes the preceding consonant. The letter Y shows how letters change their function.
When used as a vowel in Vietnamese, the letter y represents the close front unrounded vowel. When used as a monophthong, it is functionally equivalent to the Vietnamese letter i. Thus, Mỹ Lai does not rhyme but mỳ Lee does. There have been efforts to replace all such uses with i altogether, but they have been largely unsuccessful, as a consonant, it represents the palatal approximant.
In English, French, Spanish, Aymara, Turkish, Quechua, Japanese, Chinese all Indian Languages, all Semitic Languages, Y is a Palatal consonant, always denoting /j/
In the International Phonetic Alphabet, [y] corresponds to the close front rounded vowel, and the slightly different character [ʏ] corresponds to the near-close near-front rounded vowel.
It is indicative of the rarity of front rounded vowels that [y] is the rarest sound represented in the IPA by a letter of the Latin alphabet, being cross-linguistically less than half as frequent as [q] or [c] and only about a quarter as frequent as [x].
In Unicode the capital Y is codepoint U+0059 and the lower case y is U+0079.
The ASCII code for capital Y is 89 and for lowercase y is 121; or in binary 01011001 and 01111001, correspondingly.
The EBCDIC code for capital Y is 232 and for lowercase y is 168.
The numeric character references in HTML and XML are "Y" and "y" for upper and lower case respectively.
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Y |
| The Basic modern Latin alphabet | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aa | Bb | Cc | Dd | Ee | Ff | Gg | Hh | Ii | Jj | Kk | Ll | Mm | Nn | Oo | Pp | Rr | Ss | Tt | Uu | Vv | Ww | Xx | Yy | Zz | |
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Letter Y with diacritics
history • palaeography • derivations • diacritics • punctuation • numerals • Unicode • list of letters • ISO/IEC 646 |
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This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Translations: Y |
Dansk (Danish)
1.
n. - det 25. bogstav i alfabetet
3.
abbr. - yen, years (år)
symb. - ordinat
1.
n. - det 25. bogstav i alfabetet
idioms:
2.
abbr. - yen, KFUM- KFUK-sovesal, forpagter
symb. - yttrium, admittance, hyperladning
Nederlands (Dutch)
tweede onbekende waarde (wiskunde), tweede coördinaat (wiskunde), yen (Japanse munt), Y.M/W.C.A.
Français (French)
1.
n. - y (vingt-cinquième lettre de l'alphabet), (Math) y (l'axe des y)
2.
abbr. - (abrév) de yen, années
symb. - (Math) ordonnée
1.
n. - Y (vingt-cinquième lettre de l'alphabet), en forme de Y
idioms:
2.
abbr. - (abrév) de yen, auberge/hôtel YMCA, (Hist) franc-tenancier, (GB, Mil) cavalier
symb. - (Chim) yttrium, accès/permission d'entrer, (Phys) hypercharge
Deutsch (German)
1.
n. - Y, zweite unbekannte Größe, zweite Koordinate
2.
abbr. - Yen, CVJM/CVJF
symb. - (chem.) Yttrium
1.
n. - Y, zweite unbekannte Größe, zweite Koordinate
idioms:
2.
abbr. - Yen, CVJM/CVJF
symb. - (chem.) Yttrium
Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - το εικοστό πέμπτο γράμμα του αγγλικού αλφαβήτου, άγνωστος Ψ, άξονας Υ
symb. - το στοιχείο ύττριο
abbr. - έτη
idioms:
Italiano (Italian)
y, coordinata y, Yen, itrio, YMCA/YWCA
idioms:
Português (Portuguese)
n. - vigésima quinta letra do alfabeto (m)
symb. - símbolo para ordenada (Mat.) (m), símbolo do ítrium (Quím.)
abbr. - iene (moeda japonesa)
idioms:
Русский (Russian)
неизвестная величина, разветвление дороги,трубы
idioms:
Español (Spanish)
1.
n. - vigésimoquinta letra del alfabeto
2.
abbr. - años, yen
symb. - segunda coordenada, ordenada
1.
n. - vigésimoquinta letra del alfabeto, la siguiente categoría después de x, la segunda cantidad desconocida en una expresión algebraica
idioms:
2.
abbr. - yen, Asociación Cristiana de Jóvenes, Albergue de la Asociación Cristiana Femenina, hombre libre
symb. - itrio, admitencia, hipercarga
Svenska (Swedish)
n. - y, okänd faktor, y-format objekt
symb. - y-axel, y-koordinat, yttrium
abbr. - år, Kristliga föreningen av unge män/unga kvinnor, yard, ung 1 meter
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
idioms:
1. 字母y
2. 年度, 学年, 年纪, 岁数
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
abbr. -
idioms:
1.
n. - 字母y
2.
abbr. - 年度, 學年, 年紀, 歲數
한국어 (Korean)
1.
n. - 영어 알파벳의 제25자 y, y자 모양, 25번째
2.
abbr. - years(해), yen(옌)
symb. - 세로좌표
1.
n. - 영어 알파벳의 제25자 Y, Y자 모양(의 물건)
2.
abbr. - Yen(일본의 옌), YMCA hostel(기독교 청년 연합회 호스텔), YWCA hostel(기독교 여성 연합회 호스텔), yeoman(자유민)
symb. - Yttrium(이트륨) , admittance(입장), hypercharge(하이퍼차지)
日本語 (Japanese)
n. - ワイ, Y字形のもの, 未知数の記号, 未知数
idioms:
العربيه (Arabic)
(الاسم) الحرف الخامس عشر من الابجديه الانكليزيه (علامه) رمز لكميه مجهوله في الجبر (اختصار) رمز ل ( منظمه الشباب المسيحيين), رمز ل ( منظمه الفتيات المسيحيات), رمز للين ( العمله اليابانيه)
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - האות ה-52 באלפבית האנגלי
abbr. - שנים, ין (מטבע יפני)
symb. - אורדינטה - קו ישר המקביל לאחת הקואורדינטות, בעיקר לאנכית (ציר Y)
n. - האות ה-52 באלפבית האנגלי, צורת Y
abbr. - ין (מטבע יפני), אכסניה של ימק"א (גברים) או יווק"א (נשים), פרש (במשמר המלכותי הבריטי), איכר עצמאי
symb. - איטריום (יסוד), הנעלם השני במשוואה ריבועית, יחידת-מידה של מוליכות חשמלית, ערך המוענק בתורת הקוונטים למזונים ולבריומים
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Did you mean: y (in linguistics), Y? (abbreviation), Y, Alleghany Corp, Y (investment), Y, Ȳ, IJ (body of water, the Netherlands), Puneet Y (Blogger), Generation Y (generation)
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