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Upsilon is known as Pythagoras' letter, or the Samian letter, because Pythagoras used it as an emblem of the path of virtue or vice. [13] As the Roman writer Persius wrote in Satire III : and the letter which spreads out into Pythagorean branches has pointed out to you the steep path which rises on the right.
Shapes of horseshoe as designed for the African reference alphabet, clearly based on a serifed shape of the Latin capital U.. The letter Ʊ (minuscule: ʊ), called horseshoe or sometimes bucket, inverted omega or Latin upsilon, is a letter of the International Phonetic Alphabet used to transcribe a near-close near-back rounded vowel.
LATIN SMALL LETTER OPEN E ɣ: gamma: voiced velar fricative: LATIN SMALL LETTER GAMMA θ: theta: voiceless dental fricative: GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA χ: chi: voiceless uvular fricative: GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI ɸ: phi [1] voiceless bilabial fricative: LATIN SMALL LETTER PHI ʊ: upsilon [2] near-close near-back rounded vowel: LATIN SMALL LETTER ...
y was used in Greek loanwords with upsilon Υ. This letter represented the close front rounded vowel, both short and long: /y yː/. [39] Latin did not have this sound as a native phoneme, and speakers tended to pronounce such loanwords with /u uː/ in Old Latin and /i iː/ in Classical and Late Latin if they were unable to produce /y yː/.
The letters chosen for the IPA are meant to harmonize with the Latin alphabet. [note 7] For this reason, most letters are either Latin or Greek, or modifications thereof. Some letters are neither: for example, the letter denoting the glottal stop, ʔ , originally had the form of a question mark with the dot removed.
Latin upsilon (Ʊ or ʊ), a Latin letter; Lake Upsilon; Upsilon meson (ϒ) See also. Near-close near-back rounded vowel, represented as ...
The Greek letter upsilon; The Latin letter Y; The Fedora Project's Ipsilon IdP; See also. Upsilon (disambiguation) Ypsilon (disambiguation)
The glyph shapes used for these letters in specialized phonetic fonts is sometimes slightly different from the conventional shapes in Greek typography proper, with glyphs typically being more upright and using serifs, to make them conform more with the typographical character of other, Latin-based letters in the phonetic alphabet.