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===Other languages=== [[File:Newes ABC Buchlein MET DP855605.jpg|thumb|180px|Late [[Renaissance]] or early [[Baroque]] design of {{vr|v}}, from 1627]] In most languages that use the Latin alphabet, {{vr|v}} represents a [[voiced]] [[bilabial]] or [[labiodental]] sound. In contemporary [[German language|German]], it represents {{IPAslink|v}} in most loanwords, while in native German words, it always represents {{IPAslink|f}}. In standard [[Dutch language|Dutch]], it traditionally represents {{IPAslink|v}}, but in many regions, it represents {{IPAslink|f}} in some or all positions. In the Latinization of the [[Cherokee syllabary]], {{vr|v}} represents a nasalized schwa, {{IPAslink|ə̃}}. In [[Chinese language|Chinese]] [[pinyin]], while {{IPA|v}} is not used, the letter {{vr|v}} is used by most input methods to enter the letter {{vr|ü}}, which most keyboards lack ([[Romanization of Chinese|romanized-input Chinese]] is a popular method to enter Chinese text). Informal [[romanization of Chinese|romanizations]] of [[Standard Mandarin|Mandarin]] [[Chinese language|Chinese]] use {{vr|v}} as a substitute for the [[close front rounded vowel]] [[Help:IPA/Mandarin|/y/]], properly written {{vr|ü}} in both pinyin and [[Wade–Giles]].
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