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Soft sign

The soft sign (Ь, ь, italics Ь, ь) also known as the front yer, front jer, or er malak (lit. "small er") is a letter of the Cyrillic script. In Old Church Slavonic, it represented a short (or "reduced") front vowel. As with its companion, the back yer ⟨ъ⟩, the vowel phoneme that it designated was later partly dropped and partly merged with other vowels.

Cyrillic letter
Soft Sign
Phonetic usage:[◌ʲ]
The Cyrillic script
Slavic letters
Non-Slavic letters
Archaic or unused letters
А̨Б̀Б̣В̀Г̀Г̧Г̄
Г̓Г̆Ҕ̀Ҕ̆Д̓Д̀Д̨
ԀԂЕ̂Е̇Е̨Џ̆
Ж̑ԪꚄ̆
З̀З̑ԄԆ
І̂І̨Ј̵К̓К̀
К̆Ӄ̆К̑К̇К̈К̄ԞК̂
Ԛ̆Л̀ԠԈЛ̑
Л̇ԔМ̀Н̀Н̄Н̧Ԋ
ԢН̡Ѻ
П̓П́П̧ҦП̑
ҀҺ̡Р́Р̀ԖС̀С̈Ԍ
Ҫ̓Т̓Т̀ԎТ̑Т̧
Ꚍ̆ѸУ̇
У̊У̨Ф̑Ф̓Х́Х̀Х̆Х̇
Х̧Х̓ѠѼѾ
Ц́Ц̓Ꚏ̆
Ч́Ч̀Ч̑Ч̓ԬꚆ̆
Ҽ̆Ш̆Ш̑Щ̆Ꚗ̆
Ы̂Ы̃Ѣ́Ѣ̈Ѣ̆
Э̨Ю̂Я̂Я̨ԘѤ
ѦѪѨѬѮ
ѰѲѴѶ

In the modern Slavic Cyrillic writing systems in which it appears (all East Slavic languages and Bulgarian and Church Slavic), it does not represent an individual sound but indicates palatalization of the preceding consonant.

Uses and meanings

Palatalization sign

The soft sign is normally written after a consonant and indicates its softening (palatalization) (for example Ukrainian батько 'father'). Less commonly, the soft sign just has a grammatically determined usage with no phonetic meaning (like Russian: туш 'fanfare' and тушь 'India ink', both pronounced /tuʂ/ but different in grammatical gender and declension). In East Slavic languages and some other Slavic languages (such as Bulgarian), there are some consonants that do not have phonetically different palatalized forms but corresponding letters still admit the affixing soft sign.

The Serbian Cyrillic alphabet has had no soft sign as a distinct letter since the mid-19th century: palatalization is represented by special consonant letters instead of the sign (some of these letters, such as Љ or Њ, were designed as ligatures with the grapheme of the soft sign). The modern Macedonian alphabet, based on the Serbian Cyrillic variant, has had no soft sign since its creation, in 1944.

Before a vowel in East Slavic languages

Between a consonant and a vowel, the soft sign bears also a function of "iotation sign": in Russian, vowels after the soft sign are iotated (compare Russian льют /lʲjut/ '(they) pour/cast' and лют /lʲut/ '(he is) fierce'). The feature, quite consistent with Russian orthography, promulgated a confusion between palatalization and iotation, especially because ⟨ь⟩ usually precedes so-called soft vowels. Combinations ⟨ья⟩ (ya), ⟨ье⟩ (ye), ⟨ьё⟩ (yo) and ⟨ью⟩ (yu) give iotated vowels, like corresponding vowel letters in isolation (and word-initially), and unlike its use immediately after a consonant letter in which palatalization can occur but not iotation. In those cases, ⟨ь⟩ may be considered as a sign indicating that a vowel after it is pronounced separately from the previous consonant, but that is the case neither for ⟨ьи⟩ (yi) nor for ⟨ьо⟩ (yo), because these vowels are not iotated in isolation. The latter case, though, is rarely used in Russian (only in loanwords such as ⟨бульон⟩) and can be seen as a replacement of phonetically identical ⟨ьё⟩, which gets rid of an "inconvenient" letter ё. In Ukrainian and Bulgarian, the spelling ⟨ьо⟩ indicates palatalization, not iotation.

⟨ъ⟩, an "unpalatalization sign", also denotes iotation, as in the case of ⟨ъя⟩, ⟨ъе⟩, ⟨ъё⟩ and ⟨ъю⟩ in Russian.

Similarly, the soft sign may denote iotation in Belarusian and Ukrainian, but it is not used so extensively as in Russian. Ukrainian uses a quite different repertoire of vowel letters from those of Russian and Belarusian, and iotation is usually expressed by an apostrophe in Ukrainian. Still the soft sign is used in Ukrainian if the sound preceded by an iotated vowel is palatalized.

In Bulgarian

Among Slavic languages using the Cyrillic script, the soft sign has the most limited use in Bulgarian: since 1945, the only possible position is one between consonants and ⟨о⟩ (such as in names Жельо, Кръстьо, and Гьончо).

As a vowel in Slavic studies

In Slavistic transcription, Ь and Ъ are used to denote Proto-Slavic extra-short sounds /ĭ/ and /ŭ/ respectively (slověnьskъ adj. 'Slavonic'), like Old Slavonic orthography.

Digraphs

Аь

The soft sign does not occur after vowels in Slavic languages, but the аь⟩ digraph for /æ/ or /a/ was introduced to some non-Slavic Cyrillic-based alphabets such as Chechen, Ingush and various Dagestanian languages such as Tabasaran. Similarly, the оь⟩ digraph was introduced for /œ/ or /ø/, and уь⟩ for /y/, plus iotated forms such as юь⟩ and яь⟩ as required. This use of ь is similar to a trailing e as used in, for example, German, when umlauts are unavailable (cf. Goethe).

There were proposals to use the same for Turkic languages,[1] as a replacement to Cyrillic Schwa (Ә) for ə or /æ/. Unlike Schwa, which is not represented in many Cyrillic character repertoires such as Windows-1251, both ⟨а⟩ and ⟨ь⟩ are readily available as letters of the basic modern Russian alphabet.

Consonants

Like the hard sign and the palochka, many languages use the soft sign forms digraphs to represent sounds which are phonetically similar, yet distinct phonemes from the bare letter. For example, while г represents /g/, гь represents /ɣ/ in Crimean Tatar, /ɦ/ in Archi, and /h/ in Avar and Tabasaran.

Representations

Under normal orthographic rules, it has no uppercase form, as no word begins with the letter. However, Cyrillic type fonts normally provide an uppercase form for setting type in all caps or for using it as an element of various serial numbers (like series of Soviet banknotes) and indices (for example, there was once a model of old Russian steam locomotives  – ru:Паровоз Ь).

In the romanization of Cyrillic, the soft sign is typically transliterated with U+02B9 ʹ MODIFIER LETTER PRIME. Sometimes U+02BC ʼ MODIFIER LETTER APOSTROPHE is used, or the soft sign may be ignored if it is in a position that it does not denote iotation, for example: Тверь=Tver, Обь=Ob. It can also be transcribed "y" or "i" if preceding a vowel.

In Belarusian it is romanized as a combining acute, e.g., зь ⟨ź⟩, ць ⟨ć⟩, нь ⟨ń⟩, ль ⟨ĺ⟩.

Name of letter

Related letters and other similar characters

Computing codes

Character information
Preview Ь ь
Unicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER SOFT SIGN CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER SOFT SIGN
Encodings decimal hex dec hex
Unicode 1068 U+042C 1100 U+044C
UTF-8 208 172 D0 AC 209 140 D1 8C
Numeric character reference Ь Ь ь ь
Named character reference Ь ь
KOI8-R and KOI8-U 248 F8 216 D8
Code page 855 238 EE 237 ED
Code page 866 156 9C 236 EC
Windows-1251 220 DC 252 FC
ISO-8859-5 204 CC 236 EC
Macintosh Cyrillic 156 9C 252 FC

References

  1. ^ Sergeyev, Andrey V. (2001-04-19). "QazaNovica practical transcription – a project of reformed Cyrillic-based Turkic alphabet". "21st Century: language, time and space" international workshop. Retrieved February 12, 2012.

soft, sign, this, article, about, cyrillic, character, psychopathology, related, neurological, symptom, neurological, soft, signs, confused, with, lowercase, letter, with, bowl, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, . This article is about the Cyrillic character For the psychopathology related neurological symptom see neurological soft signs Not to be confused with the lowercase letter B Ƅ or I with bowl This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Soft sign news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message The soft sign italics also known as the front yer front jer or er malak lit small er is a letter of the Cyrillic script In Old Church Slavonic it represented a short or reduced front vowel As with its companion the back yer the vowel phoneme that it designated was later partly dropped and partly merged with other vowels Cyrillic letterSoft SignPhonetic usage ʲ The Cyrillic scriptSlavic lettersAA A A A ӒBVGGDЂЃEE ЀE E YoYeYe ZhZZ ЅIII YiYi I ЍI ӢJЈKLЉMNЊOO O O ŌӦPRSS TЋЌUU U U ӮЎӰFHCChЏShSh YY ѢEE YuYu Yu YaYa Ya Non Slavic lettersӐA A Ӓ ӔӘӘ Ә ӚV G G G G G G G ҔҒӺҒ ӶD D D D D ӖE Yo Ye ҖӜӁZh ҘӞZ Z Z ԐԐ ӠI ӤҊҚӃҠҞҜK ԚL ӅԮԒL ӍᵸN N ӉҢԨӇҤO O Ӧ ӨӨ Ө Ө ӪԤP R ҎS ҪS S T T T T T ҬTU ӲU Ӱ ҰҮҮ H H H H H ҲӼӾҺԦC C ҴҶҶ ӴӋCh ҸCh Ch ҼҾSh Sh ꚜY Y ӸꚝҌҨE E E ӬӬ Ӭ Yu Yu Yu Yu Ya Ya Ya Ya ԜӀArchaic or unused lettersA B B V G G G G G Ҕ Ҕ D D D ԀԂꚀꙢE E E Џ Zh ԪꚄꚄ ꙂꙄꙀZ Z ԄԆꚈꚂꚔI I ꙆЈ ꙈK K K Ӄ K K K K ԞK Ԛ L ԠꙤԈL L ԔM ꙦN N N ԊԢN ѺꙨꙪꙬꙮꚘꚚP P P ҦP ҀҺ R R ԖS S ԌҪ T T ԎT ꚊT ꚌꚌ ѸꙊU U U F F H H H H H H ѠꙌѼѾꙠC C ꚎꚎ ꚐCh Ch Ch Ch ԬꚒꚆꚆ Ҽ Sh Sh Sh ꚖꚖ ꙎꙐY Y Ѣ Ѣ Ѣ ꙒE ꙔYu ꙖYa Ya ԘѤѦꙘѪꙚѨꙜѬѮѰѲѴѶꙞList of Cyrillic letters List of Cyrillic multigraphsvteIn the modern Slavic Cyrillic writing systems in which it appears all East Slavic languages and Bulgarian and Church Slavic it does not represent an individual sound but indicates palatalization of the preceding consonant Contents 1 Uses and meanings 1 1 Palatalization sign 1 2 Before a vowel in East Slavic languages 1 3 In Bulgarian 1 4 As a vowel in Slavic studies 1 5 Digraphs 1 5 1 A 1 5 2 Consonants 2 Representations 3 Name of letter 4 Related letters and other similar characters 5 Computing codes 6 ReferencesUses and meanings EditPalatalization sign Edit Main article Palatalization phonetics The soft sign is normally written after a consonant and indicates its softening palatalization for example Ukrainian batko father Less commonly the soft sign just has a grammatically determined usage with no phonetic meaning like Russian tush fanfare and tush India ink both pronounced tuʂ but different in grammatical gender and declension In East Slavic languages and some other Slavic languages such as Bulgarian there are some consonants that do not have phonetically different palatalized forms but corresponding letters still admit the affixing soft sign The Serbian Cyrillic alphabet has had no soft sign as a distinct letter since the mid 19th century palatalization is represented by special consonant letters instead of the sign some of these letters such as Љ or Њ were designed as ligatures with the grapheme of the soft sign The modern Macedonian alphabet based on the Serbian Cyrillic variant has had no soft sign since its creation in 1944 Before a vowel in East Slavic languages Edit Between a consonant and a vowel the soft sign bears also a function of iotation sign in Russian vowels after the soft sign are iotated compare Russian lyut lʲjut they pour cast and lyut lʲut he is fierce The feature quite consistent with Russian orthography promulgated a confusion between palatalization and iotation especially because usually precedes so called soft vowels Combinations ya ya e ye yo yo and yu yu give iotated vowels like corresponding vowel letters in isolation and word initially and unlike its use immediately after a consonant letter in which palatalization can occur but not iotation In those cases may be considered as a sign indicating that a vowel after it is pronounced separately from the previous consonant but that is the case neither for i yi nor for o yo because these vowels are not iotated in isolation The latter case though is rarely used in Russian only in loanwords such as bulon and can be seen as a replacement of phonetically identical yo which gets rid of an inconvenient letter yo In Ukrainian and Bulgarian the spelling o indicates palatalization not iotation an unpalatalization sign also denotes iotation as in the case of ya e yo and yu in Russian Similarly the soft sign may denote iotation in Belarusian and Ukrainian but it is not used so extensively as in Russian Ukrainian uses a quite different repertoire of vowel letters from those of Russian and Belarusian and iotation is usually expressed by an apostrophe in Ukrainian Still the soft sign is used in Ukrainian if the sound preceded by an iotated vowel is palatalized In Bulgarian Edit Among Slavic languages using the Cyrillic script the soft sign has the most limited use in Bulgarian since 1945 the only possible position is one between consonants and o such as in names Zhelo Krsto and Goncho This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2012 As a vowel in Slavic studies Edit See also Proto Slavic language Notation and Proto Balto Slavic language Notation In Slavistic transcription and are used to denote Proto Slavic extra short sounds ĭ and ŭ respectively slovensk adj Slavonic like Old Slavonic orthography Digraphs Edit A Edit The soft sign does not occur after vowels in Slavic languages but the a digraph for ae or a was introduced to some non Slavic Cyrillic based alphabets such as Chechen Ingush and various Dagestanian languages such as Tabasaran Similarly the o digraph was introduced for œ or o and u for y plus iotated forms such as yu and ya as required This use of is similar to a trailing e as used in for example German when umlauts are unavailable cf Goethe There were proposals to use the same for Turkic languages 1 as a replacement to Cyrillic Schwa Ә for e or ae Unlike Schwa which is not represented in many Cyrillic character repertoires such as Windows 1251 both a and are readily available as letters of the basic modern Russian alphabet Consonants Edit Like the hard sign and the palochka many languages use the soft sign forms digraphs to represent sounds which are phonetically similar yet distinct phonemes from the bare letter For example while g represents g g represents ɣ in Crimean Tatar ɦ in Archi and h in Avar and Tabasaran Representations EditUnder normal orthographic rules it has no uppercase form as no word begins with the letter However Cyrillic type fonts normally provide an uppercase form for setting type in all caps or for using it as an element of various serial numbers like series of Soviet banknotes and indices for example there was once a model of old Russian steam locomotives marked ru Parovoz In the romanization of Cyrillic the soft sign is typically transliterated with U 02B9 ʹ MODIFIER LETTER PRIME Sometimes U 02BC ʼ MODIFIER LETTER APOSTROPHE is used or the soft sign may be ignored if it is in a position that it does not denote iotation for example Tver Tver Ob Ob It can also be transcribed y or i if preceding a vowel In Belarusian it is romanized as a combining acute e g z z c c n n l ĺ Name of letter EditBelarusian myakki znak lit soft sign Belarusian pronunciation mʲak kʲi znak Bulgarian er malk lit small yer Bulgarian pronunciation er ˈma lek the hard sign being named er golyam big yer Church Slavonic yer romanized yerʹ Old Church Slavonic ѥr romanized yerĭ with unknown meaning Kazakh zhinishkelik belgisi lit sign of softness Kazakh pronunciation ʒɘŋɘʃkʲelɘk bʲelɡɘsɘ Kyrgyz ichkertүү belgisi Russian myagkij znak lit soft sign Russian pronunciation ˈmʲaexʲ kʲɪj znak or archaic mostly pre 1917 name er jerʲ Serbian tanko jer tanko јer lit thin yer or simply je јer yer the hard sign being named debelo jer debelo јer thick yer or jor јor yor Ukrainian m yakij znak romanized miakyi znak lit soft sign Ukrainian pronunciation mja ˈkɪj znak Uzbek yumshatish belgisiRelated letters and other similar characters EditLatin letter B which lowercase letter is nearly identical Cyrillic letter Hard sign Ҍ ҍ Cyrillic letter Semisoft sign Ѣ ѣ Cyrillic letter Yat Y y Cyrillic letter Yery Љ љ Cyrillic letter Lje Њ њ Cyrillic letter Nje Apostrophe I with bowl J and Ј Cyrillic lettersComputing codes EditCharacter information Preview Unicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER SOFT SIGN CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER SOFT SIGNEncodings decimal hex dec hexUnicode 1068 U 042C 1100 U 044CUTF 8 208 172 D0 AC 209 140 D1 8CNumeric character reference amp 1068 wbr amp x42C wbr amp 1100 wbr amp x44C wbr Named character reference amp SOFTcy amp softcy KOI8 R and KOI8 U 248 F8 216 D8Code page 855 238 EE 237 EDCode page 866 156 9C 236 ECWindows 1251 220 DC 252 FCISO 8859 5 204 CC 236 ECMacintosh Cyrillic 156 9C 252 FCReferences Edit Sergeyev Andrey V 2001 04 19 QazaNovica practical transcription a project of reformed Cyrillic based Turkic alphabet 21st Century language time and space international workshop Retrieved February 12 2012 Look up soft sign or in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Soft sign amp oldid 1141414153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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