Wynn

1

Wynn or wyn (Ƿ ƿ; also spelled wen, win, ****ƿynn, ƿyn, ƿen, and ƿin) is a letter of the Old English alphabet, where it is used to represent the sound.

History

The letter "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 during the Middle English period, circa 1300. In post-wynn texts, it was sometimes replaced with ⟨u⟩ but often replaced with a ligature form of ⟨uu⟩, which the modern letter ⟨w⟩ developed from.

Meaning

The denotation of the rune is "joy, bliss", known from the Anglo-Saxon rune poems: "Ƿenne brūceþ, þe can ƿēana lẏt sāres and sorge and him sẏlfa hæf blǣd and blẏsse and eac bẏrga geniht." "Who uses it knows no pain, sorrow nor anxiety, and he himself has prosperity and bliss, and also enough shelter."

Miscellaneous

It is not continued in the Younger Futhark, but in the Gothic alphabet, the letter 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 thorn, þ) to have been borrowed into the English alphabet (or any extension of the Latin alphabet). A modified version of the letter wynn called vend was used briefly in Old Norse for the sounds, , and. The rune may have been an original innovation, or it may have been adapted from the classical Latin alphabet's P, or Q, or from the Rhaetic's alphabet's W. As with þ, the letter wynn 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⟩.

Unicode

The following wynn and wynn-related characters are in Unicode:

Computing codes

This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.

Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the Wikimedia Foundation.

Edit article