The Letter y

ya This letter, ya, makes the sound, "ya," which of course rhymes with ka, "ka."

First, let's examine the similarities between ya, "ya," and ka, "ka." There's that horizontal bar on top, which joins letters togethers. Youre going to see on almost every Devanagari letter. Written together, these two letters would make kaya. Don't try to think about what this would sound like, yet; I just want you to examine how they look joined together, hanging from the line. I also want to you look at both of them, and realize that the first one, ka, makes the," ka" sound, and the second one, ya, makes the, "ya" sound.

How else are they similar? They both have a vertical bar coming down from the horizontal bar, although the vertical bars are in slightly different positions. Many letters have vertical bars, but not all.

How about differences? Besides the horizontal and vertical bars, everything else is different. In fact, the letter ya, "ya," should be easy to remember: if you were to take away the top bar, what's left looks like an English, "y" with that has somehow been bent. (Maybe there was a letter ka before it that kaicked it, in which case the letter ya yaelled and yaelped loudly as it was severly bent.) OK, so it doesn't look exactly like an English, "y," but you'll remember the sound, anyway.

Remember that ya makes the "ya" sound, which is similar to (but not exactly) the sound in, "yum." It does not make the "yaa" sound that rhymes with the English, "raw." Practice saying ya: ya. ya. ya. ya..