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yogh
[ yohkh ]
noun
- the letter used in the writing of Middle English to represent a palatal fricative, as in ung (Modern English young ) or a velar fricative, as in litliche (Modern English lightly ).
yogh
/ 箩蓲伞 /
noun
- a character (葷) used in Old and Middle English to represent a palatal fricative very close to the semivowel sound of Modern English y, as in Old English 荤别辞苍驳 (young)
- this same character as used in Middle English for both the voiced and voiceless palatal fricatives; when final or in a closed syllable in medial position the sound approached that of German ch in ich, as in 办苍测荤迟 (knight). After the 14th century this symbol became the modern consonantal (semivocalic) y when initial or commencing a syllable, and though no longer pronounced in medial position it is preserved in many words by a modern gh, as in thought
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of yogh1
1250鈥1300; Middle English yogh, yok
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of yogh1
C14: perhaps from yok yoke , referring to the letter's shape
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
In the chapter 鈥淒 is for Disappeared Letters,鈥 for example, he uses the opening lines of 鈥淏eowulf鈥 to show how letters such as 鈥測ogh鈥 and 鈥渨ynn鈥 have left us.
From
Yogh 葷 is alphabetized as g, thorn 镁 as th.
From
Refer to the image for the black letter poems as the yogh/ezh & thorn/h characters are difficult to distinguish.
From
This e-text contains a number of unusual characters: 艙 oe ligature, 鉁 maltese cross, 鈦 tironian ampersand, 艒 o-macron, c虄 c-tilde, 欧 y-circumflex, and 葷 yogh.
From
Yogh is used in dictionary headwords; the others occur only in etymologies.
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