Why is the letter "W" called that?

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In block letters it's a double V but if you write in cursive it looks more like a double U.

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I guess the old Latin alphabet is to blame: There is no special letter for "U", instead the letter "V" is used.

For the same reason, there is a German proverb "Jemandem ein X für ein U vormachen" (roughly translated: "Fooling someone to think an X is an U"). This comes from a time when the bill in a bar was written in Roman numerals on a slate. When it was time to pay, some drunks tried to convince the bartender that their X (10) was actually an U/V (5).
 
It seems weird that we don't have a letter for the th sound, but the sound of ou with another vowel gets w.

Ouorking as a ouagie, for example.
 
At some point English speakers decided they needed a new approximant consonant and figured they'd replace the "ua" sound with a single labial-velar consonant.
 
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