Y/y
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Y/y
Summary
Y/y ranks in the top 0.27% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,837 views/month, #209 of 77,819).[1]
Key Facts
- Y/y's image is recorded as Latin alphabet Yy.svg[2].
- Y/y's image is recorded as Semaphore Yankee.svg[3].
- Y/y's flag image is recorded as ICS Yankee.svg[4].
- Y/y's based on is recorded as Υ[5].
- Y/y's subclass of is recorded as Latin-script letter[6].
- Y/y's subclass of is recorded as vowel letter[7].
- Y/y's subclass of is recorded as consonant letter[8].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Latin script[9].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Polish alphabet[10].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as English alphabet[11].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Breton alphabet[12].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Romanian alphabet[13].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Slovak alphabet[14].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Icelandic alphabet[15].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Lithuanian alphabet[16].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Vietnamese alphabet[17].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Turkish alphabet[18].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Azerbaijani Latin alphabet[19].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as French alphabet[20].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Czech alphabet[21].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Finnish alphabet[22].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Africa Alphabet[23].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as African reference alphabet[24].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Pan-Nigerian alphabet[25].
- Y/y's part of is recorded as Benin National Alphabet[26].
Body
Works and Contributions
Things named for Y/y include Theory Y[27], a management theory[28], founded in 1950[29], written by Douglas McGregor[30] and Y button[31], a Xbox game controller button[32].
Why It Matters
Y/y ranks in the top 0.27% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,837 views/month, #209 of 77,819).[1] Y/y has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33] Y/y is known by 35 alternative names across languages and contexts.[34]
Entities named for Y/y include Theory Y[27], a management theory[28], founded in 1950[29], written by Douglas McGregor[30] and Y button[31], a Xbox game controller button[32].