| Near-open central vowel | |||
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| ɐ | |||
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| IPA number | 324 | ||
| Encoding | |||
| Entity (decimal) | ɐ |
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| Unicode (hex) | U+0250 | ||
| X-SAMPA | 6 |
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| Kirshenbaum | &" |
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| Sound | |||
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The near-open central vowel, or near-low central vowel, is a type of vowel sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ⟨ɐ⟩, a rotated lowercase letter a.
The IPA prefers terms "close" and "open" for vowels, and the name of the article follows this. However, a large number of linguists, perhaps a majority, prefer the terms "high" and "low", and these are the only terms found in introductory textbooks on phonetics such as those by Peter Ladefoged.
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IPA help • IPA key • chart • |
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| Language | Word | IPA | Meaning | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arabic | Standard[1] | قطة | [qitˤːɐ] | 'cat' | Allophone of long and short /a/ before a word boundary. See Arabic phonology |
| Bulgarian | ъгъл | [ˈɤɡɐɫ] | 'angle' | See Bulgarian language | |
| Chinese | Cantonese | 心/sam1 | [sɐm˥] | 'heart' | See Cantonese phonology |
| Danish | spiser | [ˈsb̥iˀsɐ] | 'eat(s)' (present) | See Danish phonology | |
| Dutch | The Hague | letter | [ˈlɛtɐ] | 'letter' | Corresponds to /ər/ in other dialects. See Dutch phonology |
| English | California[2] | nut | [nɐt] | 'nut' | ⟨ʌ⟩ may be used to transcribe this vowel as it corresponds to /ʌ/ in other dialects. See English phonology |
| RP[3] | |||||
| Inland North America | bet | [bɐt] | 'bet' | Variation of /ɛ/ used in some places whose accents have undergone the Northern cities vowel shift. | |
| German | Ober | [ˈoːbɐ] | 'waiter' | Reduced vowel. See German phonology | |
| Korean[4] | 발 | [pɐl] | 'foot' | More often transcribed with ⟨a⟩. See Korean phonology | |
| Portuguese | Many Brazilian dialects[5] | saca | [ˈsakɐ] | 'sack' | Reduced vowel. See Portuguese phonology |
| Russian[6] | голова | [ɡəɫɐˈva] | 'head' | Occurs mostly immediately before stressed syllables. See Russian phonology | |
| Dawsahak | [nɐ] | 'to give' | |||
| Vietnamese | ăn | [ɐn] | 'to eat' | See Vietnamese phonology | |
Lee, Hyun Bok (1999), "Korean", Handbook of the International Phonetic Association, Cambridge University Press, pp. 120–122, ISBN 0-521-63751-1
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