V (letter): Difference between revisions

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Examples: '''vúlgar, véry, vāst, háve, wâve''' and finally in '''spív, Slàv, dërv'''. [v] involves more friction as air passes through the mouth; for [w] the articulators organs are further apart, making the sound more [[vowel]]-like.
Examples: '''vúlgar, véry, vāst, háve, wâve''' and finally in '''spív, Slàv, dërv'''. [v] involves more friction as air passes through the mouth; for [w] the articulators organs are further apart, making the sound more [[vowel]]-like.


The letter '''v''' is rare at the end of a word, and it is most commonly found in that position pronounced 'f' in Slavonic (i.e. Russian, Bulgarian, etc.) names: '''Rachmáninov, Prokófiev, Krùshchev''' (-chóff), '''Mólotov'''; it is also in '''Névsky''' (pronounced '''v''') and '''Tchaikóvsky''' (usually [f]).
The letter '''v''' is rare at the end of a word, and it is most commonly found in that position pronounced [f] in Slavonic (i.e. Russian, Bulgarian, etc.) names: '''Rachmáninov, Prokófiev, Medvédev''' *Midvyédiff, '''Krùshchev''' (-chóff), '''Mólotov'''; it is also in '''Névsky''' (pronounced '''v''') and '''Tchaikóvsky''' (usually [f]).


Being rare at the end, '''v''' hardly ever needs to be doubled, as it is in '''révved úp thê éngine''' (to avoid *rêved).  '''v''' does not normally have to be doubled after a preceding short vowel (usually '''é'''): '''séven, cléver, héaven, éver, évery, séver, bévy, lòver, drível, cívil'''.  But it doubles before final '''y''' to emphasise that the preceding vowel is short: '''chívvy, sávvy''' (compare '''chîves''' and '''nâvy'''). So '''flívver''' is unusual, and it rhymes with '''ríver'''.  
Being rare at the end, '''v''' hardly ever needs to be doubled, as it is in '''révved úp thê éngine''' (to avoid *rêved).  '''v''' does not normally have to be doubled after a preceding short vowel (usually '''é'''): '''séven, cléver, héaven, éver, évery, séver, bévy, lòver, drível, cívil'''.  But it doubles before final '''y''' to emphasise that the preceding vowel is short: '''chívvy, sávvy''' (compare '''chîves''' and '''nâvy'''). So '''flívver''' is unusual, and it rhymes with '''ríver'''.  

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V, v is a letter of the Latin alphabet. It is the twenty-second letter of most variants of the Latin alphabet, being placed after U and before W: for instance it is the case in the English alphabet. Its English name is pronounced [ˈviː], that is vee.

V is also the Roman numeral representing the number 5.

The phoneme /v/ occurs in many languages, but is absent in many others; many speakers may substitute some kind of [b] or [u]. For example, Japanese makes use of both: ウイルス uirusu 'virus' and ライブ raibu 'live'.

Use in English

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  

Phonetically, [v] is a labiodental fricative, partially or completely voiced, air passing between the lower lip and upper front teeth as they touch. It differs from [f] only in that the vocal folds vibrate, which does not occur for [f] (compare vîle and fîle - the accents show stress and pronunciation: see English phonemes). This is in contrast to [w], where both lips are used without touching each other or any teeth: whîle.

Examples: vúlgar, véry, vāst, háve, wâve and finally in spív, Slàv, dërv. [v] involves more friction as air passes through the mouth; for [w] the articulators organs are further apart, making the sound more vowel-like.

The letter v is rare at the end of a word, and it is most commonly found in that position pronounced [f] in Slavonic (i.e. Russian, Bulgarian, etc.) names: Rachmáninov, Prokófiev, Medvédev *Midvyédiff, Krùshchev (-chóff), Mólotov; it is also in Névsky (pronounced v) and Tchaikóvsky (usually [f]).

Being rare at the end, v hardly ever needs to be doubled, as it is in révved úp thê éngine (to avoid *rêved). v does not normally have to be doubled after a preceding short vowel (usually é): séven, cléver, héaven, éver, évery, séver, bévy, lòver, drível, cívil. But it doubles before final y to emphasise that the preceding vowel is short: chívvy, sávvy (compare chîves and nâvy). So flívver is unusual, and it rhymes with ríver.

The preceding vowel is long in: êven, fêver, hâver, fâvour, sâviour, ôver, clôver, drîver, dîver, wâver, hâven and Stêven (= the more regular spelling of Stêphen, which does not have an [f] sound).

See also