Ö U+00D6, Ö
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS
Composition:O [U+004F] + ◌̈ [U+0308]
Õ
[U+00D5]
Latin-1 Supplement ×
[U+00D7]

TranslingualEdit

 

LetterEdit

Ö (lower case ö)

  1. The letter O with a diaeresis.
  2. The letter O with an umlaut.

See alsoEdit

AzerbaijaniEdit

LetterEdit

Ö upper case (lower case ö)

  1. The twenty-second letter of the Azerbaijani alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See alsoEdit

Central FranconianEdit

EtymologyEdit

Moselle Franconian generally has no ö. In Ripuarian:

  • /œ/ is from Middle High German ö in most closed syllables, in most dialects also in open syllables.
  • /ø/ is from ü in most closed syllables.
  • /œː/ is from ö before certain consonants; from analogical umlaut of /ɔː/.
  • /øː/ is from öu, üe.

PronunciationEdit

  • IPA(key): (short open) /œ/, (short closed) /ø/, (long open) /œː/, (long closed) /øː/

LetterEdit

Ö

  1. A letter in the German-based alphabet of Central Franconian.
  2. A letter in the Dutch-based alphabet of Central Franconian.

Usage notesEdit

  • In the Dutch-based spelling, short closed /ø/ is represented by u, long closed /øː/ by eu, long open /œː/ by äö.

EstonianEdit

LetterEdit

Ö (upper case, lower case ö)

  1. The 29th letter of the Estonian alphabet, preceded by Ä and followed by Ü.

FinnishEdit

EtymologyEdit

From Swedish Ö and/or its origin, German Ö, in which the umlaut (two dots) were originally a lowercase e, first placed to the side and later on top of o/O to signify fronting of the vowel via Germanic umlaut.

LetterEdit

Ö (upper case, lower case ö)

  1. The twenty-eighth letter of the Finnish alphabet, called öö and written in the Latin script.

Derived termsEdit

See alsoEdit

HungarianEdit

PronunciationEdit

LetterEdit

Ö (upper case, lower case ö)

  1. The twenty-sixth letter of the Hungarian alphabet, called ö and written in the Latin script.

DeclensionEdit

Inflection (stem in long/high vowel, front rounded harmony)
singular plural
nominative Ö Ö-k
accusative Ö-t Ö-ket
dative Ö-nek Ö-knek
instrumental Ö-vel Ö-kkel
causal-final Ö-ért Ö-kért
translative Ö-vé Ö-kké
terminative Ö-ig Ö-kig
essive-formal Ö-ként Ö-kként
essive-modal
inessive Ö-ben Ö-kben
superessive Ö-n Ö-kön
adessive Ö-nél Ö-knél
illative Ö-be Ö-kbe
sublative Ö-re Ö-kre
allative Ö-höz Ö-khöz
elative Ö-ből Ö-kből
delative Ö-ről Ö-kről
ablative Ö-től Ö-ktől
non-attributive
possessive - singular
Ö-é Ö-ké
non-attributive
possessive - plural
Ö-éi Ö-kéi
Possessive forms of Ö
possessor single possession multiple possessions
1st person sing. Ö-m Ö-im
2nd person sing. Ö-d Ö-id
3rd person sing. Ö-je Ö-i
1st person plural Ö-nk Ö-ink
2nd person plural Ö-tök Ö-itek
3rd person plural Ö-jük Ö-ik

See alsoEdit

Kalo Finnish RomaniEdit

PronunciationEdit

LetterEdit

Ö (upper case, lower case)

  1. The thirty-first letter of the Kalo Finnish Romani alphabet, written in the Latin script.[1]

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

  1. 1.0 1.1 Kimmo Granqvist (2011), “Aakkoset [Alphabet]”, in Lyhyt Suomen romanikielen kielioppi [Consice grammar of Finnish Romani]‎[1] (in Finnish), Kotimaisten kielten keskus, →ISBN, →ISSN, retrieved February 6, 2022, pages 1-2

RomaniEdit

PronunciationEdit

LetterEdit

Ö (upper case, lower case ö)

  1. (International Standard) The letter O with the umlaut.

Usage notesEdit

  • Rarely used in Hungarian loanwords in Romani[1].

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ Yūsuke Sumi (2018), “ö”, in ニューエクスプレス ロマ(ジプシー)語 [New Express Romani (Gypsy)] (in Japanese), Tokyo: Hakusuisha, →ISBN, page 17

TurkishEdit

PronunciationEdit

LetterEdit

Ö (upper case, lower case ö)

  1. The nineteenth letter of the Turkish alphabet, called ö and written in the Latin script.

See alsoEdit