English uses the Latin alphabet of the Romans. However, this had no letter suitable for representing the speech sound /w/ which was used in Old English, though phonetically the sound represented by /v/ was quite close. In the 7th century scribes wrote uu for /w/; later they used the runic symbol known as wynn. European scribes had continued to write uu, and this usage returned to England with the Norman Conquest in 1066. Early printers sometimes used vv for lack of a w in their type. The name double-u recalls the former identity of u and v, which you can also see in a number of words with a related origin, for example flour/flower, guard/ward, or suede/Swede.
For the OCD among us I present the alphabet in alphabetical order:
H R B C D W E F A X L M N S I G J K O P Q T V Y U Z
I also point out that most American English speakers are unaware of the difference between the 2 flavors of “th” (voiced and unvoiced), as displayed in the phrase “that thing” (/ðæt/ /θɪŋ/).
mddshubby2005 about 7 years ago
Why is it called a “w” when it clearly looks like a double v?
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 7 years ago
In Finland no one gets homework. You have to do it all in school instead.
djlactin about 7 years ago
And yes, the name of ‘Z’ was changed to rhyme with ‘C’.
DiminishedFirst about 7 years ago
The first rhyme (‘G’ and ‘P’) is only possible by cramming LMNO all together. Refer to Dan Rather’s 1976 SNL skit “The Decabet”
Silly Season about 7 years ago
@mddshubby2005
Always go to Oxford dictionary for that type of question:
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/explore/why-is-w-pronounced-double-u
English uses the Latin alphabet of the Romans. However, this had no letter suitable for representing the speech sound /w/ which was used in Old English, though phonetically the sound represented by /v/ was quite close. In the 7th century scribes wrote uu for /w/; later they used the runic symbol known as wynn. European scribes had continued to write uu, and this usage returned to England with the Norman Conquest in 1066. Early printers sometimes used vv for lack of a w in their type. The name double-u recalls the former identity of u and v, which you can also see in a number of words with a related origin, for example flour/flower, guard/ward, or suede/Swede.
whiteheron about 7 years ago
Mrs Olson should teach this Three Stooges classic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=usQem53fDH8
garcoa about 7 years ago
Just a minute, Frazz, the i rhymes with i.
cervelo about 7 years ago
In French, w is indeed pronounced double v as “double vay”.
sandpiper about 7 years ago
@garcoa: two different pronunciations of the same letter: i sounded as in eye and i as sounded in it. No rhyming sounds there, only look-a-likes.
Masterskrain about 7 years ago
And why DO b,c,d,e,g,p,t,v, and z all rhyme? As well as a, j, and k?
GaryCooper about 7 years ago
Wrong, Frazz. “I” rhymes with itself.
John Jack Bollinger about 7 years ago
And: Why does Wyoming start with a “Y” ?
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 7 years ago
For the OCD among us I present the alphabet in alphabetical order:
H R B C D W E F A X L M N S I G J K O P Q T V Y U Z
I also point out that most American English speakers are unaware of the difference between the 2 flavors of “th” (voiced and unvoiced), as displayed in the phrase “that thing” (/ðæt/ /θɪŋ/).
Diat60 about 7 years ago
This all has me waiting for Jeopardy!
chromosome Premium Member about 7 years ago
The “w” is instrumental in naming a familiar creature: https://i.imgur.com/njan1Io.jpg
Daeder about 7 years ago
The alphabet was in a completely different order before Mozart wrote that tune.
ConnorCooney over 6 years ago
I love Frazz!