We (Cyrillic)

Usage

The pronunciations shown in the table are the primary ones for each language; for details consult the articles on the languages. Lowercase We is similar to some forms of Cyrillic Omega in appearance.

LanguagePronunciation
Kurdish language/ʋ/
Yaghnobi language/β̞/, /β/ or /u̯/ (after a vowel at the end of a syllable)[4][5][6][7]

Computing codes

Character information
PreviewԜԝ
Unicode nameCYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER WECYRILLIC SMALL LETTER WE
Encodingsdecimalhexdecimalhex
Unicode1308U+051C1309U+051D
UTF-8212 156D4 9C212 157D4 9D
Numeric character referenceԜԜԝԝ
gollark: Technology is too complicated for it to work now.
gollark: It won't go well *at all*.
gollark: The grid here noticeably breaks for a few hours every year or so, presumably because there's a lot of redundancy due to lots of components in it. If we had a smaller-scale one, it would either have to be really overbuilt or fail when it was cloudy for too many weeks or something like that, but it would be free of cascading-failure-y problems.
gollark: Less area/stuff to spread problems over.
gollark: Dunbar's number is an incredibly handwavey estimate, but I think the concept is sound.

See also

  • Cyrillic characters in Unicode

References

  1. "Cyrillic Supplement: Range: 0500–052F" (PDF). The Unicode Standard, Version 6.0. p. 45. Retrieved 2011-05-23.
  2. Heciyê Cindî (1974). Әлифба. Yerevan. p. 96.
  3. Dilan M.R. Roshani. "Existing Kurdish alphabets". Kurdish Academy of Language. Retrieved 2017-09-17.
  4. А. Л. Хромов. Ягнобский язык. – М.: «Наука», 1972. (in Russian)
  5. А. Л. Хромов. Ягнобский язык // Основы иранского языкознания. Новоиранские языки Ⅱ. – Восточная группа / Под ред. В. С. Расторгуевой. – М.: «Наука», 1987. – С. 644–701. (in Russian)
  6. В. С. Соколова. Ягнобский язык // Очерки по фонетике иранских языков. – М.–Л., 1953. – С. 59–79. (in Russian)
  7. С. П. Виноградова. Ягнобский язык // Иранские языки Ⅲ. – Восточноиранские языки. – М.: «Индрик», 2000. – С. 290–310. (in Russian)
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