Y
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Y is the twenty-fifth letter of the Latin alphabet. Its name in English is wy, sometimes spelled wye.
See V. In Ancient Greek Υψιλον (Ypsilon) was pronounced IPA [u], later on [y], now [i]. The Romans borrowed Y directly from the Greek, because they felt that V no longer adequately represented Greek [y].
The letter Y was used in Old English, as in Latin, with the value [y]; however, some think that this use was an independent invention in England created by stacking a V and an I, unrelated to the Latin use of the letter. By Middle English, [y] had lost its roundedness and become [i], and Y came to be used with the same values as I, [iː] and [ɪ] and [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. Thus the words myth [of Greek origin] and gift [of Old English origin], which originally contained high front rounded vowels, both have [ɪ] nowadays.
The English name of the letter, pronounced [waɪ], is of uncertain origin. It is possible that a former name [yː] broke in Old English to [wiː], which would regularly yield Modern English [waɪ].
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.
In Spanish, Y is called i griega, in Catalan i grega, in Polish igrek and in French and Dutch i grec (all mean "Greek i"); in most other European languages the Greek name is still used. The letter Y was originally established as a vowel. In the standard English language, the letter Y is traditionally regarded as a consonant (as depicted in American game show Wheel of Fortune), but as a survey of almost any English text, including this one, will show, Y more commonly functions as a vowel.
Originally, Y was a vowel letter in Greek, representing [u] and later on, front rounded [y], becoming [i] in Modern Greek. It has the sound value [y] in German, in Finnish and the Scandinavian languages, where it can never be a consonant. In contrast, in the Latin transcription of Nenets (Nyenec) the letter "y" palatalizes the preceding consonant. The letter Y nicely shows how letters change their function. In Afrikaans, Y denotes the diphthong [EI], probably as a result of mixing lower case i and y or may derive from the IJ ligature. In Dutch, Y appears only in loanwords and names and is usually pronounced [i]. It is often left out of the Dutch alphabet and replaced with the "letter IJ". Italian, too, has Y only in very few loanwords.
In Castilian 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 Castile (Ysabel) and Ferdinand II of Aragon. This spelling was reformed by the Royal Spanish Academy and currently is only found in proper names spelt archaicly, 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. In Spanish names, an y (meaning "and") can separate the father surname from the mother surname as in "Santiago Ramón y Cajal". Catalan names use i for this.
In the International Phonetic Alphabet, [y] corresponds to the close front rounded vowel, and [ʏ] corresponds to the near-close near-front rounded vowel.
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Alternative representations
Yankee represents the letter Y in the NATO phonetic alphabet.
In international Morse code the letter Y is DahDitDahDah: - · - -
In Braille the letter Y is represented as ⠽ (in Unicode), the dot pattern:
XX .X XX
Computing
In Unicode the capital Y is codepoint U+0059 and the lowercase 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.
Meanings of "Y"
- "The Y" is short for:
- the YMCA, or sometimes, the YWCA.
- Brigham Young University (BYU) or the large "Y" made of stones on the mountain overlooking BYU.
- In biochemistry, Y is the symbol for tyrosine.
- In chemistry, Y is the symbol for yttrium.
- In color models,
- In combinatory logic, Y is the name of a well known fixed point combinator.
- In comic books, Y: The Last Man is the title of a DC comics series by Brian K. Vaughan.
- In command line interpreters like 4DOS,
yis a command to concatenate the output of two or more streams. - In economics, Y is used to represent income.
- In electrical engineering, Y is the symbol for admittance, the inverse of impedance.
- In film, Y is the name of a 1987 Swedish film; see Y (film).
- In finance, Y is the U.S. ticker symbol for Alleghany Corporation.
- In games, Y is the name of a modern board game, played on a triangle-shaped board; see Y (game)
- In genetics Y denotes the Y chromosome.
- In sex, XY denotes male in the XY sex-determination system.
- In geography,
- In mathematics, y is the usual symbol for the variable represented on the vertical axis (ordinate) in analytic geometry.
- In the SI system,
- As the first letter of a postal code,
- In sociology, Y refers to Generation Y.
- In statistics and analysis, y commonly denotes the dependent variable.
- In video games, Y is an abbreviation for Yoshi, a Nintendo character.
- In Internet slang, Y is commonly referred to as "why" due to the similarity in pronunciation, see yellow why
I+J=Y?
In the Netherlands when you write both an I and J together in cursive you get an Y. For example ijs would look like ys. Most people, however, put two dots on the Y if it comes from the I+J, so you can usually tell the difference.
See also
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ca:Y sn:Y cs:Y da:Y de:Y et:Y el:Y als:Y es:Y eo:Y fr:Y gl:Y it:Y kw:Y la:Y nl:Y ja:Y no:Y nn:Y pl:Y pt:Y ro:Y ru:Y simple:Y sl:Y fi:Y sv:Y tl:Y vi:Y yo:Y zh:Y
