U (letter)

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U is a letter of the Latin alphabet. It is the twenty-first letter of most variants of the Latin alphabet, being placed after T and before V: for instance it is the case in the English alphabet. Its English name is pronounced [ˈjuː], like the words you and ewe.

Use in English

u normally represents three back vowel sounds, one of which (û) has a variant with an initial semivowel, 'yû'.

Examples (the accents show stress and pronunciation: see English phonemes):

The short sound: dúck, fún, úp, cúddle, lúst, múst, lúck, búbble, troúble, soúthern (but not sòuth), nút, cúp, fúss, búg, bús, stún, búlb, pútt golf (cf. pùt place) nún God (= nòne negative). Compare lúck and loòk (both pronounced ‘look’ in demotic speech in Northern England): ú, because it is a single letter, likes to be followed by -ck. ú comes after ò in: Doúglas, floúrish, noúrish, yoúng, troúble, doúble (cf. BrE roûble, AmE rûble).

There are two different long sounds: one with an invisible consonantal y before it (as always found in as in feŵ or ieŵ as in vieŵ); and a plain sound (as in toô, foôd, noôn). The sound is always yû initially: ûse (verb, voiced s; noun, unvoiced s), ûsual, Ûrals, ûríne.

Pronounced yû: cûrious, mûcous, vácuum, Canûte, pûre, cûre, ukelèlê, bûte, cûte, fûtile, mûte, pûtrid, queûe (*kyoô = cûe) and preferably also stûpid, nûclear, nûde.

Pronounced oô by nearly all English speakers: Lûke, lûnar, flûe chimney = flû influenza, blûe, glûe, rûde, rûle, rûmour, Rûfus, Rûpert, accrûe, scrûple. Pronounced oô by many Americans but with y by nearly all British: tûne, tûbe, dûty.

Pronunciation depending on region and idiolect: lûred, lûrid, lûcid, Lithuânia, sûit, Surinám.

The sound with the invisible y can also be spelt : pneumônia, neûrotic, eûphony, psêudo- (and without the y in rheûmatism) or ûi as in nûisance, though the oô sound is more common: slûice, brûise, recrûit, crûise, frûit, jûice.

There is never any y sound when the spelling is : soûp, groûp, throûgh, roûble, Loûvre - though ou has other sounds: yoúng, troúble, doúble, fŏur, cŏurse, ŏught, nŏught, jöurney.

After j it is impossible to make a difference: Jûne, Jûpiter, jûniper, jûry, jûke-bóx, jûte, cf. choôse. There are no words beginning shû- (cf. shút) or chû- (cf. chúm) - except for the French chûte shaft = shoõt gun, which does not have the normal ch sound.

Occasionally with the combination there is a tendency to palatalise fully and pronounce the s as sh, as for example in sûre certain, which BrE speakers can make sound like the name Shåw, and which never sounds like sewêr waste; and in íssue (*íshue - though there is a recent trend back to *íssyue) and tíssue. But most words do not palatalise: assûme has the y sound, as can sûit, while sûture and sûper have a plain s sound.

(The tendency noted above for BrE speakers to make sûre sound like Shåw used to be more widespread, as with, for example, secûrity pronounced *sekyŏrity: it can be heard in old British films.)

ù sounds like in foòt and occurs in a few common words: pùsh, bùsh, fùll, pùt, pùdding, coùld, woùld, shoùld (silent l’s in the last three).

u is almost always the letter that follows q, where it is pronounced w: quêen, quénch, quâke, quíll, quést. Like w, it has an effect on the following a, making it sound like ŏ or ó:

sounding like wŏ: quårter, quårtz, squåll, quartét, quårt.

ùa sounding like wó: sqùalor, qùantity, qùadrangle, qùarrel.

In some words from Spanish, u is pronounced w: Nicarágua (-gwə), marijuàna (*mariyəwànə), iguàna (*igwànə).

A redundant u sometimes occurs in the middle of ŏr as ŏur in: 'fŏur, cŏurse, sŏurce, gŏurd.

Another redundant u occurs in the middle of ör as öur in jöurney, jöurnal, adjöurn, cöurteous, cöurtesey politeness (cf. cürtsey bow), scöurge and unstressed in Lúxembourg.

u is also silent before i in guîde, guílty, buíld, guíld, bíscuit, cïrcuit, and before e in guéss, guést, and usually in the ending -ue: tòngue, vâgue, rôgue, burlésque, baròque, unìque, grotésque, but not in âgûe or Móntagûe.

āunt and guàrd also have redundant u, as does gâuge (*gâje), though this can be spelt gâge in America.

-us is an ending with the schwa sound, most often in names: Dêlius, Míngus, Tåurus, Sagittãrius, Vênus, Sírius, Cánopus, Aquãrius, Pándarus, Lûpus, Cêtus, Arctûrus, Jûlius, Crássus, Cássius, Vílnius, Epicûrus, Confûcius and also in nouns: ábacus, sánctus, nímbus, sýllabus, ómnibus, détritus, crôcus.

But it’s -ous with adjectives: glorious, fûrious, têdious, pulchritûdinous, màrvellous.

uu is very rare and can be pronounced as one syllable yû - as usually in vácûum - or as two syllables yûù - as in contínûùm.

Irregular u’s

Spelling Pronunciation
au pãir *ô pãir
au pãir *ô pãir
Austria *Óstria
because *bicóz
bûreau *byûrô
bureaucracy *byurócracy
bury earth bérry fruit
business *bízniss
busy *bízzy
faux-pàs *fô-pà
gauche *gôsh
laureate *lóriət
laurel *lórrəl
Laurence *Lórrənce (Lawrence is more common)
Laurie name lórry vehicle
Maurice (BrE) given name Mórris surname
mauve *môav (move is pronounced *moôve)
pláteau *plátô
tábleau *táblô

Also, in some BrE, u is pronounced f in lieuténant (*lefténant) - though in AmE and other BrE, it is a regular û.