Em (Cyrillic)

Usage

As used in the alphabets of various languages, Em represents the following sounds:

  • bilabial nasal consonant /m/, like the pronunciation of m in "him"
  • palatalized bilabial nasal consonant /mʲ/

The pronunciations shown in the table are the primary ones for each language; for details consult the articles on the languages.

LanguagePosition in
alphabet
Pronunciation
Belarusian14th/m/, /mʲ/
Bulgarian13th/m/, /mʲ/
Macedonian16th/m/
Russian14th/m/, /mʲ/
Serbo-Croatian15th/m/
Ukrainian17th/m/

Computing codes

Character information
PreviewМм
Unicode nameCYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER EMCYRILLIC SMALL LETTER EM
Encodingsdecimalhexdecimalhex
Unicode1052U+041C1084U+043C
UTF-8208 156D0 9C208 188D0 BC
Numeric character referenceММмм
Named character referenceМм
KOI8-R and KOI8-U237ED205CD
Code page 855211D3210D2
Code page 8661408C172AC
Windows-1251204CC236EC
ISO-8859-5188BC220DC
Macintosh Cyrillic1408C236EC
gollark: Also MIMO.
gollark: So clearly language needs this.
gollark: For example, "WiFi" is capable of automatically choosing bitrates based on the signal level being received.
gollark: So this suggests that language needs a mechanism to negotiate higher bitrates, like most communications/radio-y protocols.
gollark: Also, you have to pay more attention because you cannot look back if you miss things.

References

  1. Nakanishi, Akira (1990), Writing Systems of the World, Tuttle Publishing, p. 20, ISBN 0804816549.
  • The dictionary definition of М at Wiktionary
  • The dictionary definition of м at Wiktionary
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