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Ya (hiragana: や, katakana: ヤ) is one of the Japanese kana, each of which represents one mora. The hiragana is written in three strokes, while the katakana is written in two. The hiragana is written in three strokes, while the katakana is written in two.
Unicode provides separate code-points for the Old Cyrillic and civil script forms of this letter. A number of Old Cyrillic fonts developed before the publication of Unicode 5.1 placed iotated A (Ꙗ/ꙗ) at the code points for Ya (Я/я) instead of the Private Use Area, [3] but since Unicode 5.1, iotated A has been encoded separately from Ya.
Ya (Cyrillic) (Я), a Cyrillic alphabet letter; Ya (Javanese) (ꦪ), a letter in the Javanese script; Ya (kana), the Romanization of the Japanese kana や and ヤ; Yāʼ (ي), an Arabic letter; Ya (أيّها), a vocative particle in Arabic and other Semitic languages; Ya (hangul) (ㅑ), a letter in the Korean hangul alphabet
In the Persian alphabet, the letter is generally called ye following Persian-language custom. In its isolated and final forms, the letter does not have dots ( ی ), much like the Arabic Alif maqṣūrah or, more to the point, much like the custom in Egypt, Sudan and sometimes Maghreb.
That spelling matches the Latin alphabet used for the Slavic language Polish, whose letter y represents the same sound. Similarly, ы is used for y in the cyrillisation of Polish , such that the name Maryla appears as Марыля in Russian.
Ya with macron (Я̄ я̄; italics: Я̄ я̄) is a letter of the Cyrillic script. Ya with macron is used in the Aleut (Bering dialect), [ 1 ] Evenki , Ingush , Mansi , Nanai , Negidal , Ulch , Kildin Sami , Selkup , Central Siberian Yupik and Chechen languages.
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SMS language displayed on a mobile phone screen. Short Message Service language, textism, or textese [a] is the abbreviated language and slang commonly used in the late 1990s and early 2000s with mobile phone text messaging, and occasionally through Internet-based communication such as email and instant messaging.