Belarusian The letter is called
non-syllabic u or
short u ( or у кароткае,
u karotkaye) in Belarusian because although it resembles the vowel у (
u), it does not form
syllables. Its equivalent in the
Belarusian Latin alphabet is , although it is also sometimes transcribed as . In native Belarusian words, is used after vowels and represents a , as in хлеў, pronounced (
chleŭ, ‘shed’) or воўк (
voŭk, ‘wolf’). This is similar to the in English
cow . The letter cannot occur before a
non-iotated vowel in native words (except compound words such as паўакна, ‘half a window’); when that would be required by grammar, is replaced by . Compare хлеў (
chleŭ, ‘shed’) with за хлявом (
za chlavóm, ‘behind the shed’). Also, when a word starts with an unstressed and follows a word that ends in a vowel, it forms a diphthong through
liaison and it is written with instead. For example, у хляве (
u chlavié, ‘in the shed’) but увайшлі яны ў хлеў (
uvajšlí janý ŭ chleŭ, ‘they went into the shed’). According to the current official orthographic rules of 2008, proper names conserve the initial in writing, so the capital letter can occur only in all-capitals writing. Previous official orthographic rules (1959) also made exception for loanwords (каля універсітэта, ‘near the university’, now spelled каля ўніверсітэта). The unofficial 2005 standardization of
Taraškievica allows the capital in proper names.
Karakalpak The letter is the 26th letter in the
Karakalpak alphabet. It corresponds to the sound
/w/ and the Latin letter
W. ==In culture==