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𛀁

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

𛀁 U+1B001, 𛀁
HIRAGANA LETTER ARCHAIC YE
(Corrected: HENTAIGANA LETTER E-1)
𛀀
[U+1B000]
Kana Supplement 𛀂
[U+1B002]
See also: , 𛀀, and

Japanese

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Japanese Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia ja

Etymology 1

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From cursive man'yōgana . Became obsolete for representing ye in the mid-Heian period when ye merged with e in spoken Japanese; later resurrected by linguists in the late Edo period or Meiji period for representation of Old and Early Classical Japanese.

Syllable

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𛀁 (ye or e

  1. (obsolete) The hentaigana syllable ye or e.
    ()𛀁moeruto burn, etymologically from classical () (moyu)
  2. (obsolete) The hiragana syllable 𛀁 (ye). Its equivalent in katakana is (ye) or 𛄡 (𛄡) (ye).
Usage notes
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  • 𛀁 and 𛀀 are used to represent the Japanese language before the mid-10th century, in which /e/ and /je/ were different phonemes.
/e/ /je/
hiragana 𛀁
katakana 𛀀 [or 𛄡]
In modern Japanese, old /e/ and /je/ both evolved into /e/, and are both written as in hiragana and in katakana. Later reintroduction of the sound /je/ is written as いぇ in hiragana and イェ in katakana. Retrospective discussion of /je/ in Old and Early Classical Japanese (prior to the mid-Heian period merger with /e/) uses 𛀁 in hiragana and 𛄡 in katakana (the latter invented for this purpose during the Meiji period to prevent confusion with the modern use of エ to represent /e/ rather than its ancient sound value of /je/).
  • 𛀁 was used historically as a hentaigana character, as an alternative form of (e).

Etymology 2

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Particle

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𛀁 (ye

  1. (obsolete) Identical in meaning to the particle , but used only after pronunciations of , 𛀁, and . (Can we verify(+) this sense?)

See also

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Old Japanese

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Etymology 1

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Native readings.

Noun

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𛀁 (ye)

  1. : eldest or oldest sibling
  2. : inlet

Etymology 2

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Suffix

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𛀁 (-ye)

  1. irrealis of (yu, spontaneous / passive / potential auxiliary)
  2. continuative of (yu, spontaneous / passive / potential auxiliary)