Ь
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Translingual
Letter
Ь (lower case ь)
- (obsolete) A letter of the Unified Northern Alphabet, Yañalif and similar orthographies, used during the short-lived Soviet Latinization campaign of the 1930s.
Languages with this letter were Altai (Oyrot), Bashkir, Cherkes, Chukchi, Crimean Tatar, Dungan, Kabardin, Kazakh, Kalmuk, Karakalpak, Karachay, Ket, Khakass, Khanty, Koryak, Kurdish, Kyrgyz, Mansi, Nogai, Oyrot, Permiak, Selkup, Tabasaran, Tatar and Turkmen.
Bashkir
Bulgarian
Pronunciation
- In the digraph ЬО: IPA(key): [jɔ]
Letter
Ь • (ʹ) (upper case, lower case ь)
Usage notes
- This letter is only ever used following a consonant as the digraph ьо (e.g. in шофьор (šofjor)) to denote palatalization. (If a word were in all-caps then the upper case version would be used.)
Mongolian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʲ/
Letter
Ь • (ʹ) (upper case, lower case ь) (italics: Ь, ь)
- The thirty-second letter of the Mongolian alphabet, called зөөлний тэмдэг (zöölnii temdeg), and written in the Cyrillic script.
Russian
Usage notes
- Only used when writing in allcaps.
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