Cannabis Indica

This article is about the letter. For other uses, see Wynn (disambiguation).
Name
"joy"
Shape Elder Futhark Futhorc
Runic letter wunjo.svg
Unicode
U+16B9
Transliteration w
Transcription w
IPA [w]
Position in rune-row 8

Wynn (Ƿ ƿ) (also spelled wen, ƿynn, or ƿen) is a letter of the Old English alphabet, where it is used to represent the sound /w/.

While the earliest Old English texts represent this phoneme with the digraph uu, scribes soon borrowed the rune wynn for this purpose. It remained a standard letter throughout the Anglo-Saxon era, eventually falling out of use (perhaps under the influence of French orthography) during the Middle English period, circa 1300.[1] It was replaced with uu once again, from which the modern <w> developed.

The denotation of the rune is "joy, bliss" known from the Anglo-Saxon Rune Poems[2]

Ƿenne bruceþ, ðe can ƿeana lyt
sares and sorge and him sylfa hæf
blæd and blysse and eac byrga geniht.
[Lines 22-24 in The Anglo-Saxon Runic Poem]
Who uses it knows no pain,
sorrow nor anxiety, and he himself has
prosperity and bliss, and also enough shelter. [Translation slightly modified from Dickins (1915)]

It is not continued in the Younger Futhark, but in the Gothic alphabet, the letter 𐍅 w is called winja, allowing a Proto-Germanic reconstruction of the rune's name as *wunjô "joy".

It is one of the two runes (along with þ) to have been borrowed into the English alphabet (or any extension of the Latin alphabet). A modified version of the letter ƿynn called Vend was used briefly in Old Norse for the sounds /u/, /v/, and /w/.

As with þ, ƿynn was revived in modern times for the printing of Old English texts, but since the early 20th century the usual practice has been to substitute the modern w instead due to ƿynn's visual resemblance to P.

Wynn in Unicode and HTML Entities[edit]

Capital wynn (left), lowercase wynn (right)
  • U+01F7 Ƿ latin capital letter wynn (HTML &#503;)
  • U+01BF ƿ latin letter wynn (HTML &#447;)
  • U+16B9 runic letter wunjo wynn w (HTML &#5817;)
  • U+A768 latin capital letter vend (HTML &#42856;)
  • U+A769 latin small letter vend (HTML &#42857;)
  • "Unicode character search". Retrieved 2012-04-28. 

References[edit]

  1. ^ Freeborn, Dennis (1992). From Old English to Standard English. London: MacMillan. p. 25. ISBN 9780776604695. 
  2. ^ : Dickins, Bruce (1915). Runic and Heroic Poems of the Old Teutonic Peoples. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 14-15. 

See also[edit]

Leave a Reply