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Yus

Little yus (Ѧ ѧ) and big yus (Ѫ ѫ), or jus, are letters of the Cyrillic script[1] representing two Common Slavonic nasal vowels in the early Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets. Each can occur in iotated form (Ѩ ѩ, Ѭ ѭ), formed as ligatures with the decimal i (І). Other yus letters are blended yus (Ꙛ ꙛ), closed little yus (Ꙙ ꙙ) and iotated closed little yus (Ꙝ ꙝ).

Cyrillic letter Yus






Phonetic usage:Little: [ɛ̃], Big: [ɔ̃] Little: [jɛ̃] Big: [jɔ̃]
Numeric value:Little: 900
The Cyrillic script
Slavic letters
Non-Slavic letters
Archaic or unused letters
А̨Б̀Б̣В̀Г̀Г̧Г̄
Г̓Г̆Ҕ̀Ҕ̆Д̓Д̀Д̨
ԀԂЕ̂Е̇Е̨Џ̆
Ж̑ԪꚄ̆
З̀З̑ԄԆ
І̂І̨Ј̵К̓К̀
К̆Ӄ̆К̑К̇К̈К̄ԞК̂
Ԛ̆Л̀ԠԈЛ̑
Л̇ԔМ̀Н̀Н̄Н̧Ԋ
ԢН̡Ѻ
П̓П́П̧ҦП̑
Һ̡Р́Р̀ԖС̀С̈ԌҪ̓
Т̓Т̀ԎТ̑Т̧
Ꚍ̆ѸУ̇У̊
У̨Ф̑Ф̓Х́Х̀Х̆Х̇Х̧
Х̓ѠѼѾЦ́
Ц̓Ꚏ̆Ч́
Ч̀Ч̑Ч̓ԬꚆ̆
Ҽ̆Ш̆Ш̑Щ̆Ꚗ̆
Ы̂Ы̃Ѣ́Ѣ̈Ѣ̆Э̨
Ю̂Я̂Я̨ԘѤѦ
ѪѨѬѮѰ
ѲѴѶҀ

Phonetically, little yus represents a nasalized front vowel, possibly [ɛ̃], while big yus represents a nasalized back vowel, such as IPA [ɔ̃]. This is also suggested by the appearance of each as a 'stacked' digraph of 'Am' and 'om' respectively.

The names of the letters do not imply capitalization, as both little and big yus exist in majuscule and minuscule variants.

Disappearance

 
Cyrillic little yus (left) and big yus (right); normal forms (above) and iotated (below)
 
Handwritten little yus
 
A beard tax token from 1705 containing Ѧ

All modern Slavic languages that use the Cyrillic alphabet have lost the nasal vowels (at least in their standard varieties), making Yus unnecessary.

In Bulgarian and Macedonian

Big Yus was a part of the Bulgarian alphabet until 1945. However by then, in the eastern dialects, the back nasal was pronounced the same way as ъ [ɤ]. Because the language is based mainly on them, the western pronunciations were deemed unliterary, and the letter was gone.

There were some Bulgarian and Macedonian dialects spoken around Thessaloniki and Kastoria in northern Greece (Kostur dialect, Solun dialect) that still preserve a nasal pronunciation e.g. [ˈkɤ̃de ˈɡrẽdeʃ ˈmilo ˈt͡ʃẽdo] (Къде гредеш, мило чедо?; "Where are you going, dear child?"), which could be spelled pre-reform as "Кѫдѣ грѧдешъ, мило чѧдо?" with big and little yus.

On a visit to Razlog, in Bulgaria's Pirin Macedonia, in 1955, the Russian dialectologist Samuil Bernstein noticed that the nasal pronunciation of words like [ˈrɤ̃ka] (hand), [ˈt͡ʃẽdo] (child) could still be heard from some of the older women of the village. To the younger people, the pronunciation was completely alien; they would think that the old ladies were speaking Modern Greek.[2]

In Russian

In Russia, the little Yus came to be pronounced as an iotated /ja/ (я) in the middle or at the end of a word and therefore came to represent that sound also elsewhere; the modern letter я is an adaptation of its cursive form of the 17th century, enshrined by the typographical reform of 1708. (That is also why я in Russian often corresponds to nasalized ę in Polish; cf. Russian пять; Polish pięć.)

In Polish

In Polish, which is a Slavic language written in the Latin alphabet, the letter Ę ę has the phonetic value of little Yus, and Ą ą has that of big Yus. The iotated forms are written ię/ję and ią/ją, respectively. However, the phonemes written ę and ą are not directly descended from those represented by little and big yus but developed after the original nasals merged in Polish and then diverged again. (Kashubian, the closest language to Polish, uses the letter ã instead of ę.)

In Romanian

Little and big yuses can also be found in the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet, used until 1862. Little Yus was used for /ja/ and big Yus for unknown vowels, transcribed in later Romanian as /ɨ/ and /ɘ/. Now Romanian uses the Latin alphabet and /ɨ/ is written Îî or Ââ. /ɘ/ is written as Ăă.

One of the first transcriptions of the big yus as î in Romanian is found in Samuel Klain, Acathist, Sibii, 1801.

In Slovak

Little yus in the Slovak alphabet has been substituted by a (desať, načať), e (plesať), iotated ia (žiadať, kliatba, mesiac), ie (bdieť) and ä in several cases (pamäť, päť, svätý). Big yus is transliterated and pronounced as u, or accented ú (budeš, muž, mučeník, ruka, navyknúť, pristúpiť, púť, usnúť). Iotated, and closed iotated form of little yus occur as ja (e.g. jazyk, svoja, javiť, jasle).

In Ruthenian

In Ruthenian language, little yus was used to transcribe the sound ja (as in руска(ѧ) мова ("Ruthenian language") or ѧзыкъ ("language")). This evolved into and corresponded with the letter я in the descendant languages of Belarusian, Ukrainian, and Rusyn.

In Interslavic

The Interslavic language, a zonal, constructed, semi-artificial language based on Proto-Slavic and Old Church Slavonic modified based on the commonalities between living Slavic languages, allows (though does not encourage it for intelligibility purposes) to use both the little and big yus when writing in the scientific variety of its Cyrillic script. The letters correspond directly to their etymological values from Proto-Slavic, but do not retain the nasal pronunciation, instead going for one aiming to convey the "middle-ground" sounds found in etymologically corresponding letters in living Slavic languages. The little yus corresponds to the Latin letter "ę", while the big yus to "ų" in the etymological Latin script.

The iotated versions are not part of the standard scientific vocabulary, where the yuses are instead accompanied by the Cyrillic letter "ј", also used in the modern Serbian alphabet, though their use is optionally permissible for aesthetic reasons if one opts for using the more standard iotated vowels in their writing, so that consistency is preserved.

As of May 2019, no official "scientific Cyrillic" is endorsed by the Interslavic Commission for the reason that while Latin is easier to modify by simply adding diacritics, Cyrillic requires completely distinct graphemes. That is very likely to significantly hamper intelligibility for first-time readers, so yuses should not be used in writing when aiming to convey an easily understandable message.

Related letters and other similar characters

Computing codes

Character information
Preview Ѧ ѧ Ѩ ѩ
Unicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER
LITTLE YUS
CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER
LITTLE YUS
CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER
IOTIFIED LITTLE YUS
CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER
IOTIFIED LITTLE YUS
Encodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hex
Unicode 1126 U+0466 1127 U+0467 1128 U+0468 1129 U+0469
UTF-8 209 166 D1 A6 209 167 D1 A7 209 168 D1 A8 209 169 D1 A9
Numeric character reference Ѧ Ѧ ѧ ѧ Ѩ Ѩ ѩ ѩ


Character information
Preview Ѫ ѫ Ѭ ѭ
Unicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER
BIG YUS
CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER
BIG YUS
CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER
IOTIFIED BIG YUS
CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER
IOTIFIED BIG YUS
Encodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hex
Unicode 1130 U+046A 1131 U+046B 1132 U+046C 1133 U+046D
UTF-8 209 170 D1 AA 209 171 D1 AB 209 172 D1 AC 209 173 D1 AD
Numeric character reference Ѫ Ѫ ѫ ѫ Ѭ Ѭ ѭ ѭ


Character information
Preview
Unicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER
BLENDED YUS
CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER
BLENDED YUS
Encodings decimal hex dec hex
Unicode 42586 U+A65A 42587 U+A65B
UTF-8 234 153 154 EA 99 9A 234 153 155 EA 99 9B
Numeric character reference Ꙛ Ꙛ ꙛ ꙛ


Character information
Preview
Unicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER
CLOSED LITTLE YUS
CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER
CLOSED LITTLE YUS
CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER
IOTIFIED CLOSED LITTLE YUS
CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER
IOTIFIED CLOSED LITTLE YUS
Encodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hex
Unicode 42584 U+A658 42585 U+A659 42588 U+A65C 42589 U+A65D
UTF-8 234 153 152 EA 99 98 234 153 153 EA 99 99 234 153 156 EA 99 9C 234 153 157 EA 99 9D
Numeric character reference Ꙙ Ꙙ ꙙ ꙙ Ꙝ Ꙝ ꙝ ꙝ

References

  1. ^ "Cyrillic: Range: 0400–04FF" (PDF). The Unicode Standard, Version 6.0. 2010. p. 41. Retrieved 2011-10-31.
  2. ^ October 27, 1955 entry in Bernstein's diary, Зигзаги памяти. Bernstein transcribed the words as рънка, чендо.

other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. For other uses see Yus disambiguation 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 Yus news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Little yus Ѧ ѧ and big yus Ѫ ѫ or jus are letters of the Cyrillic script 1 representing two Common Slavonic nasal vowels in the early Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets Each can occur in iotated form Ѩ ѩ Ѭ ѭ formed as ligatures with the decimal i I Other yus letters are blended yus Ꙛ ꙛ closed little yus Ꙙ ꙙ and iotated closed little yus Ꙝ ꙝ Cyrillic letter YusPhonetic usage Little ɛ Big ɔ Little jɛ Big jɔ Numeric value Little 900The Cyrillic scriptSlavic lettersAA A A ӒBVGGDЂЃEE ЀE YoYeYe ZhZZ ЅIII YiYi I ЍӢJЈKLЉMNЊOO O ŌӦPRSS TЋЌUU U ӮЎӰFHCChЏShSh YY ѢEE YuYu Yu YaYa Ya Non Slavic lettersA ӐA A Ӓ ӔӘӘ Ә ӚV G G G G G G ҔҒӺҒ ӶD D D D D ӖE Yo Ye ҖӜӁZh ҘӞZ Z Z ԐԐ ӠI I ӤҊҚӃҠҞҜK ԚL ӅԮԒL ӍᵸN N ӉҢԨӇҤO O O Ӧ ӨӨ Ө Ө ӪԤP R ҎS ҪS S T T T T T ҬTU U ӲU Ӱ ҰҮҮ H H H H H ҲӼӾҺԦC C ҴҶҶ ӴӋCh ҸCh Ch ҼҾSh Sh Y Y ӸҌҨE 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 Һ 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 ԘѤѦꙘѪꙚѨꙜѬѮѰѲѴѶҀꙞList of Cyrillic letters List of Cyrillic multigraphsvtePhonetically little yus represents a nasalized front vowel possibly ɛ while big yus represents a nasalized back vowel such as IPA ɔ This is also suggested by the appearance of each as a stacked digraph of Am and om respectively The names of the letters do not imply capitalization as both little and big yus exist in majuscule and minuscule variants Contents 1 Disappearance 1 1 In Bulgarian and Macedonian 1 2 In Russian 1 3 In Polish 1 4 In Romanian 1 5 In Slovak 1 6 In Ruthenian 2 In Interslavic 3 Related letters and other similar characters 4 Computing codes 5 ReferencesDisappearance Edit Cyrillic little yus left and big yus right normal forms above and iotated below Handwritten little yus A beard tax token from 1705 containing Ѧ All modern Slavic languages that use the Cyrillic alphabet have lost the nasal vowels at least in their standard varieties making Yus unnecessary In Bulgarian and Macedonian Edit Big Yus was a part of the Bulgarian alphabet until 1945 However by then in the eastern dialects the back nasal was pronounced the same way as ɤ Because the language is based mainly on them the western pronunciations were deemed unliterary and the letter was gone There were some Bulgarian and Macedonian dialects spoken around Thessaloniki and Kastoria in northern Greece Kostur dialect Solun dialect that still preserve a nasal pronunciation e g ˈkɤ de ˈɡrẽdeʃ ˈmilo ˈt ʃẽdo Kde gredesh milo chedo Where are you going dear child which could be spelled pre reform as Kѫdѣ grѧdesh milo chѧdo with big and little yus On a visit to Razlog in Bulgaria s Pirin Macedonia in 1955 the Russian dialectologist Samuil Bernstein noticed that the nasal pronunciation of words like ˈrɤ ka hand ˈt ʃẽdo child could still be heard from some of the older women of the village To the younger people the pronunciation was completely alien they would think that the old ladies were speaking Modern Greek 2 In Russian Edit In Russia the little Yus came to be pronounced as an iotated ja ya in the middle or at the end of a word and therefore came to represent that sound also elsewhere the modern letter ya is an adaptation of its cursive form of the 17th century enshrined by the typographical reform of 1708 That is also why ya in Russian often corresponds to nasalized e in Polish cf Russian pyat Polish piec In Polish Edit In Polish which is a Slavic language written in the Latin alphabet the letter e e has the phonetic value of little Yus and A a has that of big Yus The iotated forms are written ie je and ia ja respectively However the phonemes written e and a are not directly descended from those represented by little and big yus but developed after the original nasals merged in Polish and then diverged again Kashubian the closest language to Polish uses the letter a instead of e In Romanian Edit Little and big yuses can also be found in the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet used until 1862 Little Yus was used for ja and big Yus for unknown vowels transcribed in later Romanian as ɨ and ɘ Now Romanian uses the Latin alphabet and ɨ is written Ii or Aa ɘ is written as Ăă One of the first transcriptions of the big yus as i in Romanian is found in Samuel Klain Acathist Sibii 1801 In Slovak EditLittle yus in the Slovak alphabet has been substituted by a desat nacat e plesat iotated ia ziadat kliatba mesiac ie bdiet and a in several cases pamat pat svaty Big yus is transliterated and pronounced as u or accented u budes muz mucenik ruka navyknut pristupit put usnut Iotated and closed iotated form of little yus occur as ja e g jazyk svoja javit jasle In Ruthenian Edit In Ruthenian language little yus was used to transcribe the sound ja as in ruska ѧ mova Ruthenian language or ѧzyk language This evolved into and corresponded with the letter ya in the descendant languages of Belarusian Ukrainian and Rusyn In Interslavic EditThe Interslavic language a zonal constructed semi artificial language based on Proto Slavic and Old Church Slavonic modified based on the commonalities between living Slavic languages allows though does not encourage it for intelligibility purposes to use both the little and big yus when writing in the scientific variety of its Cyrillic script The letters correspond directly to their etymological values from Proto Slavic but do not retain the nasal pronunciation instead going for one aiming to convey the middle ground sounds found in etymologically corresponding letters in living Slavic languages The little yus corresponds to the Latin letter e while the big yus to u in the etymological Latin script The iotated versions are not part of the standard scientific vocabulary where the yuses are instead accompanied by the Cyrillic letter ј also used in the modern Serbian alphabet though their use is optionally permissible for aesthetic reasons if one opts for using the more standard iotated vowels in their writing so that consistency is preserved As of May 2019 no official scientific Cyrillic is endorsed by the Interslavic Commission for the reason that while Latin is easier to modify by simply adding diacritics Cyrillic requires completely distinct graphemes That is very likely to significantly hamper intelligibility for first time readers so yuses should not be used in writing when aiming to convey an easily understandable message Related letters and other similar characters EditYa ya Cyrillic letter Ya Ѣ ѣ Cyrillic letter Yat e e Latin letter E with ogonek a Polish letter A a Latin letter A with ogonek a Polish letterComputing codes EditCharacter information Preview Ѧ ѧ Ѩ ѩUnicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTERLITTLE YUS CYRILLIC SMALL LETTERLITTLE YUS CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTERIOTIFIED LITTLE YUS CYRILLIC SMALL LETTERIOTIFIED LITTLE YUSEncodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hexUnicode 1126 U 0466 1127 U 0467 1128 U 0468 1129 U 0469UTF 8 209 166 D1 A6 209 167 D1 A7 209 168 D1 A8 209 169 D1 A9Numeric character reference amp 1126 wbr amp x466 wbr amp 1127 wbr amp x467 wbr amp 1128 wbr amp x468 wbr amp 1129 wbr amp x469 wbr Character information Preview Ѫ ѫ Ѭ ѭUnicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTERBIG YUS CYRILLIC SMALL LETTERBIG YUS CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTERIOTIFIED BIG YUS CYRILLIC SMALL LETTERIOTIFIED BIG YUSEncodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hexUnicode 1130 U 046A 1131 U 046B 1132 U 046C 1133 U 046DUTF 8 209 170 D1 AA 209 171 D1 AB 209 172 D1 AC 209 173 D1 ADNumeric character reference amp 1130 wbr amp x46A wbr amp 1131 wbr amp x46B wbr amp 1132 wbr amp x46C wbr amp 1133 wbr amp x46D wbr Character information Preview Ꙛ ꙛUnicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTERBLENDED YUS CYRILLIC SMALL LETTERBLENDED YUSEncodings decimal hex dec hexUnicode 42586 U A65A 42587 U A65BUTF 8 234 153 154 EA 99 9A 234 153 155 EA 99 9BNumeric character reference amp 42586 wbr amp xA65A wbr amp 42587 wbr amp xA65B wbr Character information Preview Ꙙ ꙙ Ꙝ ꙝUnicode name CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTERCLOSED LITTLE YUS CYRILLIC SMALL LETTERCLOSED LITTLE YUS CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTERIOTIFIED CLOSED LITTLE YUS CYRILLIC SMALL LETTERIOTIFIED CLOSED LITTLE YUSEncodings decimal hex dec hex dec hex dec hexUnicode 42584 U A658 42585 U A659 42588 U A65C 42589 U A65DUTF 8 234 153 152 EA 99 98 234 153 153 EA 99 99 234 153 156 EA 99 9C 234 153 157 EA 99 9DNumeric character reference amp 42584 wbr amp xA658 wbr amp 42585 wbr amp xA659 wbr amp 42588 wbr amp xA65C wbr amp 42589 wbr amp xA65D wbr References Edit Cyrillic Range 0400 04FF PDF The Unicode Standard Version 6 0 2010 p 41 Retrieved 2011 10 31 October 27 1955 entry in Bernstein s diary Zigzagi pamyati Bernstein transcribed the words as rnka chendo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yus amp oldid 1142411441, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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