(1935) Vocabulaire et grammaire de la langue Houaïlou, Institut d'ethnologie. Cited in: " Houaïlou" in Greenhill, S.J., Blust, R., & Gray, R.D. They are used mostly in possessive function, but also otherwise, chiefly when the pronoun is repeated within the same sentence. The forms jul and hul are unstressed variants. ( formal ) you (singular, subject and object)ġ.Los Angeles, CA: UCLA Department of Linguistics.Īfrikaans Pronunciation ( abbreviation, slang, text messaging, Internet ) you ( in text messaging and internet conversations ) Take me with u.U ( second person, singular or plural, nominative or objective)
Russian: ю (ru) n ( ju ) ( English ), у (ru) n ( u ).Polish: u (pl) n, u otwarte n ( when contrasted with "ó" ).Mandarin: ( English letter names are called as in English, no other standard Mandarin name exists )