, with є used to spell "је".
Ukrainian and Rusyn In
Ukrainian and
Rusyn, Є/є represents the sound combination or the vowel sound after a palatalized consonant. It is the 8th letter of
Ukrainian alphabet (in 1935-1992 it was the 7th, as
Ґ was removed).
Khanty In
Khanty, the letter represents the sound /je/.
Old Serbian In
old Serbian orthography, Є/є represented same sounds as in Ukrainian and Rusyn: the sound combination or the vowel sound after a palatalized consonant. The letter was eliminated in
Vuk Karadžić's
alphabet and replaced by
digraph је.
Old Slavonic, Old East Slavic In the oldest Slavonic manuscripts, Є was just a graphical variant of Е and thus represents without palatalization. Later Є replaced
Ѥ (i.e. denotes after consonants and after vowels and in an initial position). Later on, it also accepted both a decorative role (as an initial letter of a word, even if there was no iotation) and an orthographical role, to make the distinction between certain
homonymical forms (mostly between
plural and
singular).
New Church Slavonic Since the mid-17th century, the Church Slavonic orthography has the following main rules related to the usage of shapes Є and Е: • in an initial position, always use Є; • otherwise, use Е with the following exceptions: • in noun's endings, use -євъ and -ємъ for plural and -евъ, -емъ for singular; • in other endings, suffixes and roots of nouns, adjectives, participles, numerals and pronouns, use Є for plural/dual, if there exists a homonymous form in the singular (either of the same word or a different one; the actual rule is much more complicated and not well-defined, as there are multiple other ways to eliminate such homonymy); • publishers from
Kyiv also use Є in the
genitive case of three pronouns (менє, тебє, себє), and Е in the
accusative case (мене, тебе, себе); • as a numerical sign (with value 5) use Є, not Е (the rule has often been ignored outside of the
Russian Empire). In the modern Church Slavonic alphabet, the 6th letter is typically shown as
Єєе (one uppercase accompanied with two variants of lowercase). The different shapes Є and Е exist only in lowercase; thus in
all caps and
small caps styles, the distinction between Є and Е disappears.
Old Believers print their books using an older variant of New Church Slavonic language. Its orthography combines the fully formal system described above with the older tradition to use Є phonetically (after vowels, to represent iotated ).
Similar characters The United States
Federal Geographic Data Committee uses
Ꞓ, a character similar to capital Є, to represent the
Cambrian Period in geologic history. Є is similar to the
symbol for the euro currency . ==Related letters and other similar characters==