U+283D, ⠽
BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-13456

[U+283C]
Braille Patterns
[U+283E]

Translingual

A character of the braille script, standardized internationally as the letter y.

Etymology

Letter

  1. (international braille) y
  2. (Dutch Braille) ij
  3. (Latvian Braille) ņ
Non-Latin transliteration
  1. (International Greek Braille) ψ (ps) [Greek Braille uses for ψ]
  2. (Greek Braille) υ (u) [= y]
  3. (Ukrainian Braille, Russian Braille) і (i) [obsolete in Russian]
  4. (Bulgarian Braille) й (y)
  5. (Arabic Braille) ئ (ʾī)
  6. (Ethiopic Braille) (yᵊ); also -y- in Cy- syllables.
    Note that the vowel ə does not occur after Cy-, so there is no need to disambiguate as there is with Cw-.
  7. (Bharati braille) (ya)
  8. (Tibetan Braille) (cha)
  9. (Burmese Braille) (ya)
  10. (Thai Braille) (y)
  11. (Cantonese Braille) The rime iu

Symbol

( 𝅝 )

  1. (music) A whole C note.

See also

English

Letter

(y)

  1. Renders the print letter y.

Contraction

  1. you

Usage notes

  • This is used for the independent word you and where the word you is set off with an apostrophe or hyphen, for example you're, and in the non-hyphenated derivations listed above. It is not used otherwise for the letter sequence y-o-u.

Derived terms

French

Letter

(y)

  1. The letter y, including the independent word y.

Japanese

Syllable

(romaji mu)

  1. The hiragana syllable (mu) or the katakana syllable (mu) in Japanese braille.

Korean

Etymology

(o) with the right (i) side filled in, oi being romanized as 'oe'.

Letter

• (oe)

  1. The vowel (oe).

Luxembourgish

Letter

(y) (upper case )

  1. The lower-case letter y.

See also

Mandarin

Letter

  1. (Mainland Braille) The rime wai/-uai
  2. (Taiwan Braille) The rime ying/-ing
  3. (Two-Cell Braille) The onset cu- or the rime -ǎng