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Close-mid central rounded vowel

 
Wikipedia: Close-mid central rounded vowel
Vowels
See also: IPA, Consonants
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i · y
ɨ · ʉ
ɯ · u
ɪ · ʏ
e · ø
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ɛ · œ
ɜ · ɞ
ʌ · ɔ
a · ɶ
ɑ · ɒ
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Close-mid
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Where symbols appear in pairs, the one to the right represents
a rounded vowel. Vowel length is indicated by appending ː.
IPA – number 323
IPA – text ɵ
IPA – image {{{imagesize}}}
Entity ɵ
X-SAMPA 8
Kirshenbaum @.<umd>
Close-mid central rounded vowel.ogg Sound sample

The close-mid central rounded vowel is a type of vowel sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ɵ, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is 8. The symbol ɵ is a lowercase barred letter o, and should not be confused with the Greek letter theta (θ), which in IPA corresponds to a consonant sound, the voiceless dental fricative.

The symbol for the close-mid central rounded vowel may also be used with a lowering diacritic, [ɵ̞], to denote the mid central rounded vowel.

The character ɵ has been used in several Latin-derived alphabets such as the one for Janalif, but in that language it denotes a different sound than it does in the IPA. The character is homographic with Cyrillic Ө. The Unicode number is U+019F, and the symbol is called "LATIN LETTER O WITH MIDDLE TILDE".

Contents

Features

Features of this vowel:

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Chinese Cantonese /ceot7 [tsʰɵt˥] 'to go out' See Standard Cantonese
English some dialects cooperate [kʰɵˈɒpəɹeɪt] 'cooperate' reduced /oʊ/ in dialects which retain rounding
Australian[1][2] bird [bɵːd] 'bird' See Australian English phonology
Geordie goat [ɡɵːt] 'goat' Corresponds to /oʊ/ in other dialects.
Mongolian[3] өгөх [ɵɡɵx] 'to give'
Swedish dum [dɵmː] 'dumb'
Toda ? [pɵːr̘] 'name'

The Swedish [ɵ] is pronounced with compressed lips, more closely transcribed β] or β]. That of reduced English /oʊ/ is pronounced with protruded lips, more closely transcribed [ɵʷ] or [əʷ], though these could be misread as diphthongs. The type of rounding of [ɵ] in the other languages is not clear.

References

Bibliography

  • Cox, F.M. (2006), "The acoustic characteristics of /hVd/ vowels in the speech of some Australian teenagers", Australian Journal of Linguistics 26: 147–179 
  • Durie, M.; Hajek, J. (1994), "A revised standard phonemic orthography for Australian English vowels", Australian Journal of Linguistics 14: 93–107 
  • Iivonen, Antti; Harnud, Huhe (2005), "Acoustical comparison of the monophthong systems in Finnish, Mongolian and Udmurt", Journal of the International Phonetic Association 35 (1): 59-71 

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