From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

U is a letter of related and vertically oriented alphabets used to write Mongolic and Tungusic languages. [1]: 549–551 

Mongolian language

U
The Mongolian script
Mongolian vowels
a
e
i
o
u
ö
ü
(ē)
Mongolian consonants
n
ng
b
(p)
q/k
γ/g
m
l
s
š
t
d
č
ǰ
y
r
(w)
Foreign consonants
Letter [2]: 17, 19–20  [3]: 546 
u Transliteration [note 1]
Alone
ᠤ‍ Initial
‍ᠤ‍ Medial
‍ᠤ Final
Ligatures [2]: 22–23  [3]: 546 
bu pu Transliteration
ᠪᠤ ᠫᠤ Alone
ᠪᠤ‍ ᠫᠤ‍ Initial
‍ᠪᠤ‍ ‍ᠫᠤ‍ Medial
‍ᠪᠤ ‍ᠫᠤ Final
Separated suffixes [note 2]
‑u(...) ‑u ‑un ‑ud ‑uruγu Transliteration
 ᠤ ⟨?⟩ Whole
 ᠤᠨ ⟨?⟩  ᠤᠳ ⟨?⟩
 ᠤᠷᠤᠭᠤ ⟨?⟩
  • Transcribes Chakhar / ʊ/; [6] [7] Khalkha / ʊ/, / ə/, and / /. [8]: 40–42  Transliterated into Cyrillic with the letter у. [9] [4]
  • Indistinguishable from o. [2]: 19  [10]: 9–10 
  • ‍ᠤ᠋‍ = medial form used after the junction in a proper name compound. [11]: 44 
  • Derived from Old Uyghur waw ( 𐽳), preceded by an aleph ( 𐽰) for isolate and initial forms. [3]: 539–540, 545–546  [12]: 111, 113  [11]: 35 
  • Produced with V using the Windows Mongolian keyboard layout. [13]
  • In the Mongolian Unicode block, u comes after o and before ö.

Clear Script

Xibe language

Manchu language

Notes

  1. ^ Scholarly transliteration. [4]
  2. ^ Separated suffixes starting with, or made up by the letter u include:  ᠤ ⟨?⟩ ‑u or  ᠤᠨ ⟨?⟩ ‑un ( genitive),  ᠤᠳ ⟨?⟩ ‑ud ( plural), and  ᠤᠷᠤᠭᠤ ⟨?⟩ ‑uruγu ( directive). [5]

References

  1. ^ "The Unicode Standard, Version 14.0 – Core Specification Chapter 13: South and Central Asia-II, Other Modern Scripts" (PDF). www.unicode.org. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
  2. ^ a b c Poppe, Nicholas (1974). Grammar of Written Mongolian. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN  978-3-447-00684-2.
  3. ^ a b c Daniels, Peter T.; Bright, William (1996). The World's Writing Systems. Oxford University Press. ISBN  978-0-19-507993-7.
  4. ^ a b "Mongolian transliterations" (PDF). Institute of the Estonian Language. 2006-05-06.
  5. ^ "PROPOSAL Encode Mongolian Suffix Connector (U+180F) To Replace Narrow Non-Breaking Space (U+202F)" (PDF). UTC Document Register for 2017. 2017-01-15.
  6. ^ "Mongolian Traditional Script". Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, and Mongolian Language Site. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
  7. ^ "Writing – Study Mongolian". Study Mongolian. August 2013. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
  8. ^ Svantesson, Jan-Olof; Tsendina, Anna; Karlsson, Anastasia; Franzen, Vivan (2005-02-10). The Phonology of Mongolian. OUP Oxford. ISBN  978-0-19-151461-6.
  9. ^ Skorodumova, L. G. (2000). Vvedenie v staropismenny mongolskiy yazyk Введение в старописьменный монгольский язык (PDF) (in Russian). Muravey-Gayd. ISBN  5-8463-0015-4.
  10. ^ Grønbech, Kaare; Krueger, John Richard (1993). An Introduction to Classical (literary) Mongolian: Introduction, Grammar, Reader, Glossary. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN  978-3-447-03298-8.
  11. ^ a b Janhunen, Juha (2006-01-27). The Mongolic Languages. Routledge. ISBN  978-1-135-79690-7.
  12. ^ Clauson, Gerard (2005-11-04). Studies in Turkic and Mongolic Linguistics. Routledge. ISBN  978-1-134-43012-3.
  13. ^ jowilco. "Windows keyboard layouts - Globalization". Microsoft Docs. Retrieved 2022-05-16.