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#165448 01/24/07 07:26 PM
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Quote:



Why is W the only multi syllable letter in the English alphabet?
Why? Why? Why?




Perhaps because it is quite literally "double v"?

#165449 01/24/07 07:56 PM
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And the question is: Do you spell your name with a V, Herr Wagner? Pronounced Vagner in German, of course. The joke doesn't translate well to print, but what are you gonna do?


TEd
#165450 01/24/07 11:37 PM
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Quote:

1. the 23rd letter of the English alphabet, a semivowel.




Semivowel?? A E I O U and sometimes Y and half of W??
Would quadrupleU be a full vowel??

#165451 01/24/07 11:50 PM
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a sound with vowel and consonant features: a sound that is like a vowel in involving no major obstruction of the airflow but that functions as a consonant in preceding vowels that form the nucleus of syllables. Examples in English are initial "w" and "y."


TEd
#165452 01/25/07 02:05 AM
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w is more commonly a vowel in Welch; e.g., see cwm and crwth.

#165453 01/25/07 01:01 PM
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w is more commonly a vowel in Welch; e.g., see cwm and crwth.

And ys were dotted in Middle Welsh.


Ceci n'est pas un seing.
#165454 01/25/07 01:07 PM
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Why? Why? Why?

#165455 01/25/07 01:18 PM
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Quote:


And ys were dotted in Middle Welsh.




As it is in my ex-husband's surname. Originally ending in ij, sometime in the 19thC the spelling was changed to a dotted y. His family's (north) German, but I guess the origin is Dutch.

#165456 01/25/07 02:13 PM
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Originally ending in ij, sometime in the 19thC the spelling was changed to a dotted y.

There is a difference between the Middle Welsh dotted y (with a single dot) and the Dutch ij ligature (and, for that matter the y with diaeresis. They're all in Unicode as separate glyphs.


Ceci n'est pas un seing.
#165457 01/25/07 02:16 PM
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Oh, oops. A single dot. Of course. Thanks for the clear-up, Nunc.

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