yer - ορισμός. Τι είναι το yer
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Τι (ποιος) είναι yer - ορισμός

LETTER OF CYRILLIC ALPHABET
Yer (Cyrillic); Fall of the Yers; Yers; Твёрдый знак; Er golyam; Ер голям; Big yer; Big yers; Back yer; Back yers; Yerok
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yer         
1.
Yer is used in written English to represent the word 'your' when it is pronounced informally. (BRIT)
Mister, can we 'elp to carry yer stuff in?
2.
Yer is used in written English to represent the word 'you' when it is pronounced informally. (BRIT)
I bloody told yer it would sell.
Yer         
·prep Ere; before.
Yer         
A yer is either of two letters in Cyrillic alphabets, ъ (ѥръ, jerŭ) and ь (ѥрь, jerĭ). The Glagolitic alphabet used, as respective counterparts, the letters (Ⱏ) and (Ⱐ).

Βικιπαίδεια

Yer

A yer is either of two letters in Cyrillic alphabets, ъ (ѥръ, jerŭ) and ь (ѥрь, jerĭ). The Glagolitic alphabet used, as respective counterparts, the letters (Ⱏ) and (Ⱐ). They originally represented phonemically the "ultra-short" vowels in Slavic languages, including Old Church Slavonic, and are collectively known as the yers.

In all modern Slavic languages, they either evolved into various "full" vowels or disappeared, in some cases causing the palatalization of adjacent consonants. The only Slavic language that still uses "ъ" as a vowel sign (pronounced /ɤ/) is Bulgarian, but in many cases, it corresponds to an earlier ѫ (big yus), originally pronounced /õ/, used in pre 1945 Bulgarian orthography.

Many languages that use the Cyrillic alphabet have kept one or more of the yers to serve specific orthographic functions.

The back yer (Ъ, ъ, italics Ъ, ъ) of the Cyrillic script, also spelled jer or er, is known as the hard sign in the modern Russian and Rusyn alphabets and as ер голям (er golyam, "big er") in the Bulgarian alphabet. Pre-reform Russian orthography and texts in Old East Slavic and in Old Church Slavonic called the letter "back yer". Originally, it denoted an ultra-short or reduced mid rounded vowel.

Its companion, the front yer (Ь, ь, italics Ь, ь), now known as the soft sign in Russian, Belarusian and Ukrainian, and as ер малък (er malak, "small er") in Bulgarian, originally also represented a reduced vowel, more frontal than the ъ. Today, it marks the palatalization of consonants in all of the Slavic languages written in the Cyrillic script except Serbian and Macedonian, which do not use it at all, but it still leaves traces in the forms of the palatalized letters њ and љ. In Bulgarian, it marks palatalization only when written after the letters к, г and л and represents the sound /j/ in all other cases instead.

In the modern Mongolian Cyrillic alphabet, ь is also used to represent the palatalization of the previous consonant, while ъ represents a lack of palatalization. However, ъ is only necessary for the purposes of disambiguation between a consonant and an iotated vowel in situations when palatalization should not occur, as by default it would. It is therefore rarely used. As it is not necessary to specify palatalization under those circumstances, the much more common ь is frequently used as a substitute for ъ without any ambiguity arising.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για yer
1. Get out of yer theatre and come to yer loving girl just as quickly as you ever can, she wrote.
2. Anita, meanwhile, explains, "The secret of bein‘ working class is bein‘ ‘appy with yer position, knowin‘ that you‘ve done better than yer parents and makin‘ sure that yer kids will do better than you and that is enough.
3. Lang may yer lum reek, as Gray himself might say.
4. "Wha‘ yer got then?" they carolled merrily to others.
5. Good on yer Tony, another cracking bit of legislation. – Ron, Ayr, Scotland.