Й

Short I (Cyrillic)

Short I (Cyrillic)

Letter of the Cyrillic script


Short I or Yot/Jot й; italics: Й й or Й й; italics: Й й) (sometimes called i kratkoye, Russian: и краткое, Ukrainian: йот) or I with breve, Russian: и с бреве) is a letter of the Cyrillic script.[1] It is made of the Cyrillic letter И with a breve.

Quick Facts Cyrillic letter Short I, Phonetic usage: ...
Yot, from Alexandre Benois' 1904 alphabet book

The short I represents the palatal approximant /j/, like the pronunciation of y in yesterday.

Depending on the romanization system in use and the Slavic language that is under examination, it can be romanized as y, j, i or ĭ. For more details, see romanization of Russian, romanization of Ukrainian, romanization of Belarusian and romanization of Bulgarian.

History

Active use of Й (or, rather, the breve over И) began around the 15th and 16th centuries. Since the middle of the 17th century, the differentiation between И and Й is obligatory in the Russian variant of Church Slavonic orthography (used for the Russian language as well). During the alphabet reforms of Peter I, all diacritic marks were removed from the Russian writing system, but shortly after his death, in 1735, the distinction between И and Й was restored.[2] Й was not officially considered a separate letter of the alphabet until the 1930s.

Because Й was considered to be a vowel and not a consonant, it was not required to take a hard sign when it came at the end of a word in pre-reform orthography.

Usage

More information Language, position in alphabet ...

In Russian, it appears predominantly in diphthongs like /ij/ in широкий (shirokiy 'wide'), /aj/ in край (kray 'end', 'krai'), /ej/ in долей (doley 'portion'), /oj/ in горой (goroy 'mountain'), and /uj/ in буйство (buystvo 'rage').[3] It is used in other positions only in foreign words, such as Йopк (York, not with Ё), including fellow Slavic words like Йовович (Yovovich).

In Kazakh, the letter is used to represent a short ɪ sound (e.g. берейік (tr. (Let us) give)). The letter, much like the other 11 Cyrillic letters, does not have another Latin version and merges with Ии (İi).

In Serbo-Croatian and Macedonian, the Cyrillic letter Јe is used to represent the same sound. Latin-based Slavonic writing systems, such as Polish, Czech and the Latin version of Serbo-Croatian use the Latin letter J (not the letter Y, as in English), for that purpose.

Contrastive use of Cyrillic kratka (for consonant [j]) and Latin breve (for short vowel [ĭ]) above и in Russian-Nenets dictionary

Note that breve in Й may be quite different from ordinary breve, the former having a thinner central part and thicker ends (the opposite holds for ordinary breve). This is often seen in serif fonts, cf. Й (Cyrillic Short I) and Ŭ (Latin U with breve).

Computing codes

More information Preview, Й ...

References

  1. Franklin, Simon (2019-05-16). The Russian Graphosphere, 1450-1850. Cambridge University Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-1-108-49257-7.
  2. Language dynamics in the early modern period. Karen Bennett, Angelo Cattaneo, Lingua Franca and Translation in the Early Modern Period (2018 : Lisbon, Portugal) "A host of tongues...": Multilingualism. New York, NY. 2022. ISBN 978-1-000-57461-6. OCLC 1287743631.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. Zhang, Xiangning; Zhang, Ruolin (July 2018). "Evolution of Ancient Alphabet to Modern Greek, Latin and Cyrillic Alphabets and Transcription between Them". Proceedings of the 2018 4th International Conference on Economics, Social Science, Arts, Education and Management Engineering (ESSAEME 2018). Advances in Social Science, Education and Humanities Research. Atlantis Press. pp. 156–162. doi:10.2991/essaeme-18.2018.30. ISBN 978-94-6252-549-8.
  • The dictionary definition of Й at Wiktionary
  • The dictionary definition of й at Wiktionary

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