I with grave (Cyrillic)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Cyrillic letter I with grave
Cyrillic letter I grave - uppercase and lowercase.svg
Unicode (hex)
majuscule: U+040D
minuscule: U+045D
Cyrillic alphabet
А Б В Г Ґ Д Ђ
Ѓ Е Ѐ Ё Є Ж З
Ѕ И Ѝ І Ї Й Ј
К Л Љ М Н Њ О
П Р С Т Ћ Ќ У
Ў Ф Х Ц Ч Џ Ш
Щ Ъ Ы Ь Э Ю Я
Non-Slavic letters
Ӑ Ӓ Ә Ӛ Ӕ Ғ Ҕ
Ӻ Ӷ Ԁ Ԃ Ӗ Ӂ Җ
Ӝ Ԅ Ҙ Ӟ Ԑ Ӡ Ԇ
Ӣ Ҋ Ӥ Қ Ӄ Ҡ Ҟ
Ҝ Ԟ Ԛ Ӆ Ԓ Ԡ Ԉ
Ԕ Ӎ Ӊ Ң Ӈ Ҥ Ԣ
Ԋ Ӧ Ө Ӫ Ҩ Ҧ Ҏ
Ԗ Ҫ Ԍ Ҭ Ԏ Ӯ Ӱ
Ӳ Ү Ұ Ҳ Ӽ Ӿ Һ
Ҵ Ҷ Ӵ Ӌ Ҹ Ҽ Ҿ
Ӹ Ҍ Ӭ Ԙ Ԝ Ӏ  
Archaic letters
Ҁ Ѻ Ѹ Ѡ Ѿ Ѣ
Ѥ Ѧ Ѫ Ѩ Ѭ Ѯ
Ѱ Ѳ Ѵ Ѷ    
List of Cyrillic letters
Cyrillic digraphs

I with grave (majuscule: Ѝ, minuscule: ѝ) is a character representing a stressed variant of regular letter ‹и› in some variants of the Cyrillic writing system. Nevertheless, none of the Cyrillic alphabets (either modern or archaic) includes it as a separate letter.

Contents

[edit] South Slavic languages

[edit] Bulgarian and Macedonian

Most regularly ‹Ѝ› is used in Bulgarian and Macedonian languages to distinguish the short form of the direct object ‹ѝ› ('her') from the conjunction <и> ('and', 'also'), or less frequently, to prevent ambiguity in other similar cases. When not available, the character ‹ѝ› is often replaced by an ordinary ‹и› (not recommended, but still orthographically correct) or by letter ‹й› (formally, it is considered as spelling error).

[edit] Church Slavonic

In modern (since the 17th century) Russian recension of Church Slavonic, ‹Ѝ› (or any other vowel with a grave accent) is just an orthographic variant of the same letter with an acute accent when used as the last letter of the word.

[edit] Serbian

Ѝ› (as well as other vowels with acute, grave, circumflex, or double grave accents) can be optionally used in Serbian texts to show one of four possible tones of the stressed syllabe. In cases like прѝкупити ('to gather') vs. прику́пити ('to purchase more'), or ѝскуп ('redemption' 'ransom') vs. и̏скуп ('meeting'); the usage of diacritics can also prevent ambiguity. In the Latin variant of the Serbo-Croatian writing system (so-called Gajevica), all stress/tone marks are the same, i.e. Cyrillic ‹Ѝ› corresponds to Latin ‹ì› etc.

[edit] East Slavic languages

Ѝ› (as well as any other vowel with grave accent) can be found in older (up to the first decades of the 20th century) Russian and Ukrainian books as stressed variants of regular (unaccented) vowels, like Russian вѝна ('wines') vs. вина̀ ('guilt'). Recently, East Slavonic typographies have begun using the acute accent instead of the grave accent to denote the stress: ви́на, вина́.

Stress marks are optional in East Slavic languages. They are regularly used only in special books like dictionaries, primers, or textbooks for foreigners as the stress is very unpredictable in all three languages, whereas in general texts, they are extremely rare and used mainly to help prevent ambiguity in certain cases or to show pronunciation of exotic words.

Some modern Russian dictionaries use a grave accent to denote the secondary stress in compound words (with an acute accent for the main stress), like жѝзнеспосо́бный [ˌʐɨzʲnʲɪspɐˈsobnɨj] ('viable') (from жизнь [ˈʐɨzʲnʲ] 'life' and способный [spɐˈsobnɨj] 'capable').

[edit] "Decimal" I with grave

Cyrillic orthographies that have ‹І› (the so-called "decimal I" or "Ukrainian I") can use ‹ì› or ‹í› as its stressed variant (in modern Ukrainian and Belorussian as well as in old Russian or Serbian orthographies; also in Church Slavonic). The difference between ‹ì› and ‹í› is the same as one between ‹ѝ› and ‹и́›.

[edit] See also

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages