Short U (Cyrillic)
Short U (Ў, ў) is a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet, representing the labial-velar approximant semivowel /enwiki/w/ in the Belarusian language, pronounced as the W in English "window." Its equivalent in the Belarusian Latin alphabet is Ŭ, ŭ.
This unique Cyrillic letter is not used in any other Slavic language, but is used in the Tajik alphabet, and the Cyrillic version of the Karakalpak alphabet. It was also formerly used in other non-Slavic languages of the Soviet Union, including Uzbek in 1938–1998, while Cyrillic was mandated by the Soviet Union.
It is called non-syllabic u (u nieskładovaje) in Belarusian, because by virtue of being a semivowel it can't form syllables.
History
The letter first appeared in Belarusian Łacinka in the 1860s or 1870s. The first Belarusian writers who introduced the letter were Jan Čačot and Vincent Dunin-Marcinkievič. But the first publication that used this distinct Belarusian letter Ŭ/ŭ as we know it today, was the first edition of Francišak Bahuševič "Dudka Białaruskaja", published in Kraków in 1891. In earlier Jan Čačot's Vilnia publications, for example in 1846 edition Da milych mužyczkoú, that letter was already used, but it was printed as a "u" with an accent mark (ú).
In the late 1890s and beginning of the 20th century the letter started appearing in Cyrillic publications in its modern shape Ў.
Monument
In September 2003, during the tenth celebration of "Days of Belarusian Literacy", the city authorities of the oldest Belarusian city Polatsk made a monument to honor the unique Cyrillic Belarusian letter Ў. The original idea for the monument came from the Belarusian calligraphy professor Paval Siemčanka who has studied Cyrillic type for many years.