Ur (rune)

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NameProto-GermanicOld EnglishOld Norse
*Ūruz/ŪrąŪrȲrÚr
"aurochs" / "water""aurochs"?"dross"/"rain"
ShapeElder FutharkFuthorcYounger Futhark
Runic letter uruz.svgRunic letter uruz.svgRunic letter yr.svgRunic letter uruz.svg
Unicode
U+16A2
U+16A2
U+16A3
U+16A2
Transliterationuuyu
Transcriptionuuyu, y, o, v / w
IPA[u(ː)][u(ː)][y(ː)][u(ː)], [y(ː)], [o(ː)], [w]
Position in
rune-row
22272

The reconstructed Proto-Germanic name of the Elder Futhark u rune is *Ūruz meaning "wild ox"[1] or *Ūrą "water". It may have been derived from the Raetic alphabet character u as it is similar in both shape and sound value. The name of the corresponding letter in the Gothic alphabet is urus.

Name[]

The Icelandic word for "rain" and the Old English for "aurochs" go back to two different Proto-Germanic words, *ūruz and *ūrą (although possibly from the same root[original research?]). The Norwegian meaning "dross, slag" is more obscure, but may be an Iron Age technical term derived from the word for water (cf. the Kalevala, where iron is compared to milk). Also, in the north of Spain and south of France, in the Basque language "ura" is used to mean water.

Because of this, it is difficult to reconstruct a Proto-Germanic name for the Elder Futhark rune. It may have been *ūruz "aurochs" (see also Bull worship), or *ūrą "water". The aurochs is preferred by authors of modern runic divination systems, but both seem possible, compared to the names of the other runes: "water" would be comparable to "hail" and "lake", and "aurochs" to "horse" or "elk" (although the latter name is itself uncertain). The Gothic alphabet seems to support "aurochs", though: as the name of the letter