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''' ''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 or the noun
'''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''' (sometimes the 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 *yoôst 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 10:24, 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 ûsed here, albeit ungrammatically as it produces díd...ûsed (sometimes the 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 *yoôst 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-