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Translingual
editEtymology
editFrom Elder Futhark ᛉ. The rune was flipped upside down around the 400s-500s, as can be seen on the inscription of the Järsberg Runestone.
Letter
editᛦ
- A letter of the Younger Futhark, Yr (“yew”), representing /r/ and transliterated as ʀ.
Coordinate terms
editSee also
editFurther reading
edit- Algiz § Younger Futhark on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
German
editEtymology
editFrom the interpretation as Todesrune (“death rune”).
Symbol
editᛦ
Usage notes
editThe rune is part of the Armanen runes,[1] which are based on the Younger Futhark. The visual representation of the rune in the original publication is closer to ⟨ᛣ⟩, with straight arms to mirror ⟨ᛉ⟩, but this denotes a different letter, Old English calc /k/, and not yr. There is currently no specific codepoint in Unicode for straight-armed yr as opposed to curved-armed yr, so both are conventionally encoded as ⟨ᛦ⟩. It should be noted that the distinction between round and straight runes is purely graphemic, and not historically something that distinguishes one runic script from another.
References
edit- ^ Guido von List (1908) Das Geheimnis der Runen, published 1938, page 19