English spellings/Catalogs/U: Difference between revisions

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'''ÛS''' ''America'' *yû-wéss, cf. '''ús''' ''we''; [[American English|American]] usage insists on 'U.S.', which avoids confusion with 'us' in uppercase contexts, such as tickers
'''ÛS''' ''America'' *yû-wéss, cf. '''ús''' ''we''; [[American English|American]] usage insists on 'U.S.', which avoids confusion with 'us' in uppercase contexts, such as tickers


'''ûse''' Usual use: ''noun'' *yoôss as in '''Ẁhat ís the ûse?''', ''verb'' *yoôz as in '''Ûse mîne'''; hence the pronunciation of '''ûses''' depends on whether it is the verb *yoôziz or the noun *yoôssiz. In '''Díd hê ûse to gô thére?''', however, '''ûse''' *yoôss is an infinitive verb, not a noun. (Some prefer to write '''ûsed''' here, albeit ungrammatically as it produces '''díd'''...'''ûsed'''—negative '''dídn't ûsed'''—with both parts of the verb in the past tense, against the normal rules; no difference in pronunciation is distinguishable, being unvoiced *yoostəgô in both cases.)
'''ûse''' Usual use: ''noun'' *yoôss as in '''Ẁhat ís the ûse?''', ''verb'' *yoôz as in '''Ûse mîne'''; hence the pronunciation of '''ûses''' depends on whether it is the verb *yoôziz or the noun *yoôssiz. In '''Díd hê ûse to gô thére?''', however, '''ûse''' *yoôss is an infinitive verb, not a noun. (Some prefer to write '''Díd hê ûsed''', albeit ungrammatically as '''Díd'''...'''ûsed'''—or in the negative '''dídn't '''('''hê''')''' ûsed'''—has both parts of the verb in the past tense, against the normal rules; no difference in pronunciation is distinguishable, being unvoiced *yoostəgô in both cases.)


'''ûsed''' ''use'' *yoôzd as in '''ûsed càrs'''; ''habituated'' *yoôst as in '''Î’m ûsed to thát''' and '''wê ûsed to gô thére''' (compare '''ûsed to''', *yoôstu, *yoôstə, and '''ûse to''', *yoôztu, a much rarer imperative: '''Ûse''' [this in order] '''to'''...)  
'''ûsed''' ''use'' *yoôzd as in '''ûsed càrs'''; ''habituated'' *yoôst as in '''Î’m ûsed to thát''' and '''wê ûsed to gô thére''' (compare '''ûsed to''', *yoôstu, *yoôstə, and '''ûse to''', *yoôztu, a much rarer imperative: '''Ûse''' [this in order] '''to'''...)  

Revision as of 10:56, 5 October 2015


A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Use in English
Alphabetical word list
Retroalphabetical list  
Common misspellings  


This page lists pronunciations of English words that begin with U. To see a different letter navigate with the table above. The apostrophe is treated as the last letter of the alphabet, after Z.

For a pronunciation key, click on the blue "Catalogs" link below the article title.[e]


Û = yoû person

UÈFA *yu-wâfə (≈ BrE yoû wâfer), *yu-wêfə

Ugánda Yû-, BrE = yoû gánder; some AmE Ugànda

uh *ə (the schwa sound alone), úh *ú, AmE equivalent to BrE ër

úh ôh oh, no! can have a hyphen to represent the central glottal stop

uhúh yes, one word = uh húh, two, *ú-hú, *ə-hə; according to the Urban Dictionary website, one must not confuse this with uh-uh, which is presumably a variant of úh ôh, above, as it means no [1]

Uìghur *Wêeger, rhyming with êager, Sêeger

Ûíst *Yûwist

Ûkip *Yûkip (officially all capitals)

Ukrâine (-âine, not -âne) = yoû crâne

ukulèlê, ukelèlê *yûkə-lâylêe

últimate

ultimâtum

Ûlyssês *Yoôlisêez

umbílical

ùmlàùt *oòmlòwt

ún- not is not a word, so adds a hyphen when not joined to a word

unbéarable

unbêatable

únderdog one word

úndergròund adjective before noun, metro, one word; otherwise under gròund

underlîe

underrâted -rr-

understánd one word

undertâke

únder wây or underwây

undesîrable

undo

undûe -yu

ÛNICEF YÛ-

únidéntified

ûnít yû-

unîte yû-

unîted

ûnity yû-

unknôwn - silent k, so lengthened 'double' n sounded: *ún-nôwn

unnôticed - two n’s sounded

unpálatable

unprécedented

untíl

untîtled no ún-, cf. entîtled yes

unwìêldy, cf. wìeld, wêir, wêird

upón on, time, cf. úp ón

úprŏar

ür- original = ër pause

Ûral Yû-

Urálic Yû-

Urânus *Yərânəss: *Yùrənəss is a euphemism

ürban town ër-

urbâne civilised

ürchin

Ürdu, Ûrdu

Urîah Hêep Dickens, band cf. hêap pile

ûríne yû-

urînal yû-

ürn ashes = ëarn money = ërne eagle

Ürquhart -quh- *Ürkət, *Ürcàrt, *Ïrk-heàrt

Ürsula -syələ or palatalised to -shələ

Ùruguay Yù-

ÛS America *yû-wéss, cf. ús we; American usage insists on 'U.S.', which avoids confusion with 'us' in uppercase contexts, such as tickers

ûse Usual use: noun *yoôss as in Ẁhat ís the ûse?, verb *yoôz as in Ûse mîne; hence the pronunciation of ûses depends on whether it is the verb *yoôziz or the noun *yoôssiz. In Díd hê ûse to gô thére?, however, ûse *yoôss is an infinitive verb, not a noun. (Some prefer to write Díd hê ûsed, albeit ungrammatically as Díd...ûsed—or in the negative dídn't () ûsed—has both parts of the verb in the past tense, against the normal rules; no difference in pronunciation is distinguishable, being unvoiced *yoostəgô in both cases.)

ûsed use *yoôzd as in ûsed càrs; habituated *yoôst as in Î’m ûsed to thát and wê ûsed to gô thére (compare ûsed to, *yoôstu, *yoôstə, and ûse to, *yoôztu, a much rarer imperative: Ûse [this in order] to...)

Ûtàh *Yû-

Ûtàhn, Ûtahan

Utôpia Yû-, cf. eûlogy, also yû-

Uttóxeter Yû-