Üsküdar'da Ünlü bir gÜveçci vardı. Üslubu hoş ÜstÜ başı temiz mÜlayim bir insandı. KÜlliye gÜnlerimde kÜltÜrüyle bizi aydınlatır kÜl rengi kaşlarıyla ÜstÜn bilgisini aktarırdı. Ona Üstat derdik. GÜzel gÜnler...
Übermorgen gehe ich zum Uwe um ein schÖnes FrÜhstÜck zu essen. Uwe's FrÜhstÜcke sind immer Äußerst schmackhaft. Ich hoffe es wird eine schÖne Überraschung fÜr Uwe. Nachdem ich vom Uwe zurÜckgekommen bin, werde ich fÜr eine PrÜfung Üben mÜssen.
У вас там можно на них экономить. Если захотели простирать бельё, то заставляете своего друга говорить Ü, и он сразу же превращается в стиральную машину🤣
I mean, Afrikaans sounded like ey. Which to Czechs would be EEEE whereas what Czech did would be IIII. And honestly mapping Ü to I makes more sense, since it's what that sound devolved to in Romance languages, English, and Greek. That's why Y in Greek words is pronounced like I, btw.
Ü (common form: ü ), sometimes called German y , is a character in the extended Latin alphabet , based on U, u with trema . It has different meaning and status in different languages. Actually, ü represents three completely different signs: partly a separate sign, partly u with diaeresis , partly the digraph ue. Üü Üü Technically Morse ISO/IEC 8859-1 Ü:220 / ü:252 Unicode Ü:U+00DC / ü:U+00FC Own letter Edit In the Azerbaijani , Estonian , Karelian , Spanish , French , Catalan , Crimean Tatar , Portuguese , Tatar , Turkish , Turkmen , Uyghur and Hungarian Latin alphabets, ü is a separate letter, distinct from u and ue, with its own place in the alphabet. It is usually pronounced as [y] . In pinyin and Wade-Giles transcription of Chinese , ü is used to mark y sounds. In pinyin it is only used when u would be ambiguous. Diarrhea Edit In several languages, trema (diaresis) is used to mark that a vowel should be pronounced independently and not in combination with another letter. When this is applied to u, the sign ü is formed.In Spanish , it is used to mark that the letter u should be pronounced when it is placed between g and e or between g and i, for example vergüenza . Usually the u in such placements is otherwise silent, as for example in the name of the Spanish city Guernica . Ü is generally sorted as u in these languages. Ue Edit The digraph ue came to be written in medieval German manuscripts as a u with a small e above it. This then developed into a u with two vertical lines, which eventually became two dots. In German, ü occurs in umlauts of u, as in Fuß/Füße ('foot/feet'). It counts as a variant of ui sort. When ü is not available in print, ue is used. In Swedish , ü occurs, among other things, in the German loanword müsli , as well as in surnames with German origin such as Bülow and Klüft . It is pronounced and sorted as y and is colloquially known as German y . Y is in the German alphabet , but is not used except in loanwords and proper names. On computers Edit On German and Swiss-German keyboards, ü is usually its own key. On keyboards where this is not the case - for example on Swedish keyboards - the character can often be written by the user first pressing the trema key (the key with two dots), and then u. The characters Ü and ü are coded as their own characters in Unicode : U+00DC and U+00FC respectively.
Ü
Ü
nooo I didn’t get pinned
Ü
Ü
Ü.
As a washing machine, the ü is a certified language when we jump.
I don't think those jokes are funny anymore.
@@stagerplays7727 it depends on the person.
this is truly a latin *Ü* moment
the letter looks like a big smile, change my mind.
the letter looks like it was meant to be said as u'u
@@grazka8153Fr I thought about that as soon as I saw the thumbnail
@@grazka8153because it is
Ü
Üsküdar'da Ünlü bir gÜveçci vardı. Üslubu hoş ÜstÜ başı temiz mÜlayim bir insandı. KÜlliye gÜnlerimde kÜltÜrüyle bizi aydınlatır kÜl rengi kaşlarıyla ÜstÜn bilgisini aktarırdı. Ona Üstat derdik. GÜzel gÜnler...
Übermorgen gehe ich zum Uwe um ein schÖnes FrÜhstÜck zu essen. Uwe's FrÜhstÜcke sind immer Äußerst schmackhaft. Ich hoffe es wird eine schÖne Überraschung fÜr Uwe. Nachdem ich vom Uwe zurÜckgekommen bin, werde ich fÜr eine PrÜfung Üben mÜssen.
Ich liebe umlaute Ü Ö
Ich lerne deutsch Ü Ö
Ü
I love that girl, she’s so polite :)
do all german teachers look like that?
@@mobetdawolf1558 unfortunately I don’t know. but every girl there is pretty, unlucky me :)
@@angelicart.6woe is you
@@mobetdawolf1558 no
@@lupilia.official Well said
As a Latvian i can confirm that we do get kinda drunk when saying Ü
0:41 caught me off guard
Ü exists in Spanish too, its used when the u in a word that has ui or ue is pronounced (e.g. pingüino).
My mother tongue is German and I remember being very confused about this when I learned Spanish lmao
You forgot to say first that the letter U is not usually pronounced when between G and I
it used to exist in portuguese a while ago, being a letter that replaced the "u" in a "ue" dipthong (eg. "aguentar" was written as "agüentar")
Brasil used to have Ü...
Until the new ortographic rules came :(
cant believe they take the happy face from üs
@@Kallastar. fr fr
It took me 5 years to realize Ü looks like a very happy smiley face
:) ❌
Ü✅
Ö
Wait till you see Ű
Ü fak i didn't notice
I already knew that Ü was a smiley face XD
@@SlitheringDemonä
0:17 I LAUGHED SO HARD AT THE PART 💀💀💀💀
“Can you find the difference between (Ü (Italian)) and (Ü (Latin))?”
THESE ARE THE SAME LANGUAGE
As a Sinhalese, Sundanese, and Thai, I can confirm we become a washing machine on a trampoline when we say "ü"
Eueueueueueueueueu
У вас там можно на них экономить. Если захотели простирать бельё, то заставляете своего друга говорить Ü, и он сразу же превращается в стиральную машину🤣
You cannot unsee this but I think it looks like a smile
Ü
0:34 got me dying bruh💀
Lol me being a vendin machine
BrÜh*
This is truly a Ü moment
How do you pronounce "Ü"?
Most languages: UUUUUUU
Czech: _E_
I mean, Afrikaans sounded like ey. Which to Czechs would be EEEE whereas what Czech did would be IIII. And honestly mapping Ü to I makes more sense, since it's what that sound devolved to in Romance languages, English, and Greek. That's why Y in Greek words is pronounced like I, btw.
turkish: ui
YUYUYUYUYUYU
As a czech, I can confirm that yes, E.
Afrikaans: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY
we getting out of the Ü with this one
It looks like a smiley face i love it sm
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 straight vibing 0:35
Agreed. We love this. Ü.
*Ü*
This made my day better. Thank you!
Bot💀
@@sniper_tastic_2 What to you mean?
Ü is the happiest feeling ever
0:38 "LOOK, A JUMPING WASHING MACHINE!"
Was it just me or did i use this as a smiley face before
Holy Moly
ü
Me too.
Ü is such a joyous letter
As an turkish this is a certifited ü Classic
That Ü looks so happy
This part with the washing machine was epic.
I really missed these applause in the end.
0:44 so cute
As a Burmese person can confirm we have a stroke when we say *Ü*
Im Hungarian and we use ü many times so it was really funny 😂
as an Ü I can confirm that I am a smiley face
This is truly a ü moment
As a norwegian myself, I can confirm that saying Ü sounds like we're having a bathroom emergency.
The Ukranian's Ü got me dying ☠️
When we needed him most, he returned
He never left.
@@Periwinkleaccount I’m just seeing which comment formulae get the most likes 🧌
@@Trolligi If so, then your username checks out.
@@Periwinkleaccount🗿🗿🗿
Also it was semi ironix
*ironic
Ü is like sort of a big smiley face
The “Ü” looks like a smiley face
Bro I love that everyone immediately commented ü lol
This is why I didn't see any comments, but I commented anyway.
Ü
@@redprofily ü
@@officialSgtPepperArc360ü
@@Trolligi ñ
0:34 this moment made me roll on the floor laughing💀
Ü looks kind like a smile face
Request: わ
As a austrian myself, i can confirm that is exactly how we pronounce it!
Lol it kinda reminds of a smiley face 😂 ü
As a turkish person, this is really güzel
0:24 do you remember it saying "U trema U trema" when Ü first appeared in "å"?
Turkish ü:WHY AM I NOT INCLUDED IM EVEN A LETTER IN MY LANGUAGE
Ü looks like a smiley face
Týpek is back when we needed him the most.
Also does Týpek mean Typer lol?
edit: ITS A JOKE DONT START A WAR IN THE REPLIES
Týpek is czech slang for "a guy"
@@giantotter319so if I’m reading that right…he’s a random guy
@@lunameriweather7693 yes
@@giantotter319 cool, also i love your PFP. he screm
im just now realizing Ü looks like a smiley
are you 7
@ no
@@SimpleSoldierOfficial are you absolutely sure?
@ yes, why are you asking?
@@SimpleSoldierOfficial just considering how long you took to saw that as a smiley face...
Ü looks like a smile
0:41 😂
Мем про стиральную машину убил 😂😂😂
Ü (common form: ü ), sometimes called German y , is a character in the extended Latin alphabet , based on U, u with trema . It has different meaning and status in different languages. Actually, ü represents three completely different signs: partly a separate sign, partly u with diaeresis , partly the digraph ue.
Üü Üü
Technically
Morse
ISO/IEC 8859-1
Ü:220 / ü:252
Unicode
Ü:U+00DC / ü:U+00FC
Own letter
Edit
In the Azerbaijani , Estonian , Karelian , Spanish , French , Catalan , Crimean Tatar , Portuguese , Tatar , Turkish , Turkmen , Uyghur and Hungarian Latin alphabets, ü is a separate letter, distinct from u and ue, with its own place in the alphabet. It is usually pronounced as [y] .
In pinyin and Wade-Giles transcription of Chinese , ü is used to mark y sounds. In pinyin it is only used when u would be ambiguous.
Diarrhea
Edit
In several languages, trema (diaresis) is used to mark that a vowel should be pronounced independently and not in combination with another letter. When this is applied to u, the sign ü is formed.In Spanish , it is used to mark that the letter u should be pronounced when it is placed between g and e or between g and i, for example vergüenza . Usually the u in such placements is otherwise silent, as for example in the name of the Spanish city Guernica . Ü is generally sorted as u in these languages.
Ue
Edit
The digraph ue came to be written in medieval German manuscripts as a u with a small e above it. This then developed into a u with two vertical lines, which eventually became two dots.
In German, ü occurs in umlauts of u, as in Fuß/Füße ('foot/feet'). It counts as a variant of ui sort. When ü is not available in print, ue is used.
In Swedish , ü occurs, among other things, in the German loanword müsli , as well as in surnames with German origin such as Bülow and Klüft . It is pronounced and sorted as y and is colloquially known as German y . Y is in the German alphabet , but is not used except in loanwords and proper names.
On computers
Edit
On German and Swiss-German keyboards, ü is usually its own key. On keyboards where this is not the case - for example on Swedish keyboards - the character can often be written by the user first pressing the trema key (the key with two dots), and then u.
The characters Ü and ü are coded as their own characters in Unicode : U+00DC and U+00FC respectively.
ue, diahhrea on computers?
bro accidentally featured a limestone company💀
@@LargeLogGuy have a problem?
@@MyDadsNutz no
@@BouncingyRS516 not u
Ü looks like a smile face 😂
Ü looks like a smiley face like C:
When the people said Ü, i felt it in ever bone and organ
Ü in fact is used in Hungarian as well, such as üres which means empty.
Ü
edit: do “ı“ next pls
Hi
As a Hungarian I see this as an absolute ÜÜŰÜŰ!
Ooh!
Is it me or do i see it as a smiley ?
Ü is like a fun big face
As a German,I can confirm that Ü sound like U
0:41man this musics fire💀💀💀
0:34 What da washing machine doin
Ü looks like a smily face lol
Fun fact: Ü looks like a smiley face
0:11 This got me laugh so hard 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂💩🤓☠️🗿💀🫡😂☠️💀💀💩🗿🫡💀🫡💀💩💩🤓☠️💀🫡😂🗿💀💩☠️🗿🤣🤣😂🤣🤣🤯
Ü looks like a happy face
Me whem i saw this title: ü
Ü is like a smile
THE SMILE IN Ü
Request: Þ and ý
Ü is used in turkey too
In turkish alphabet, we have Ü.
Český překladač zabije všechno :D:D
*merhaba* :)
i can't do it but like this
..
U
0:46 Corporate need you to find the diferences between Ü and Ü
Ü as a latín I can confirmo this is a Ü moment
0:16 oof
Front rounded vowel moment
Ü looks like a Big smiley face :-) :-) :-) :-)
Best edit ever 😂😂😂
0:33 OOooOoOoOooOooOooO
0:11 lmao
as spanish i can confirm that ü sounds like ü
as a turkish person we say "ü" like "OUUU"
Ü ü both are happy
0:34 got me laughing
0:40 lmao 💀
as a Norwegian I can confirm that we say ÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜÜ as U-U
0:17 😂🎉
Pov washing machine: *instantly dies* bye 👋☠️
maybe do "þ" next
Every single other language: Ü Chech: EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
my argentinian grandpa helping me how to say Ü belike: