Thumbnail Image

The Ghost Letter: Why Do Russians Rarely Write Ё?

IrynaTeacher

Hello everyone!

If you are learning Russian or just often read Russian texts, you have probably noticed a strange thing. It exists in the alphabet, we can clearly hear it in spoken words, but in writing... it completely disappears. We are, of course, talking about the long-suffering letter Ё (yo).

Why do native speakers stubbornly ignore these two dots and replace it with Е (ye)? Let's find out where the letter Ё went and whether it needs saving.

1. Historical Laziness (or Ink Economy)

The letter Ё is the youngest in the Russian alphabet. It was invented at the end of the 18th century. Before that, people used to write it as "іо".

However, when typewriters and printing presses took over the world in the 20th century, those two dots on top became a real headache. They required a separate piece of type, an extra keystroke, or extra ink. Publishers quickly realized that if they just printed Е, the context would explain everything anyway. That is how Ё became optional.

2. The Keyboard Conspiracy

Look at the modern Russian keyboard layout (ЙЦУКЕН). Do you see where Ё is? It lives in the farthest top-left corner, out in the middle of nowhere, right under the Esc key. To reach it, you have to make a conscious physical effort. Laziness is the engine of progress, and that is exactly what makes us click the regular Е, which sits comfortably right in the center.

3. The Bureaucratic Nightmare

While skipping the dots is just a harmless habit in everyday life, it turns into an absolute nightmare when it comes to official documents.

Because of the confusion between Е and Ё, people can struggle for years to claim an inheritance or get a passport. If a passport says Фёдоров (Fedorov) but a property document says Федоров — according to the law, these are two completely different people!

Added to Saved

This column was published by the author in their personal capacity.
The opinions expressed in this column are the author's own and do not reflect the view of Cafetalk.

Comments (0)

Login to Comment Log in »

from:

in:

Mostrar categorías

Language Fluency

Ruso   Native
Ucraniano   Native
Inglés   Fluido
Turco   Proficient
Rumano   Just a few words

Ranking de artículos del tutor

« Back to List of Tutor's Column
Got a question? Click to Chat