Diacritics
Yes, diacritical marks are used above vowels in some languages to indicate pronunciation variations, stress, or tonal changes. They can help to guide correct pronunciation and distinguish between different sounds.
The long vowel symbol is a bar across the top of the letter, called a macron.The short vowel symbol is a U-shaped curved line called a breve.
A letter "u" with two dots above it is called an umlaut. In languages like German, it indicates a change in the pronunciation of the vowel, often making it sound as two separate vowels or modifying its sound.
A circumflex is a diacritic mark that looks like a little line or caret (^) used in certain languages to indicate various things, such as emphasis, modification, or historical pronunciation. In English, it is not commonly used, but in languages like French, it may appear above certain vowels to denote sound changes, such as â, ê, î, ô, û.
It depends on what langauge you are talking about. If you mean German: ä: pronounce it like the "a" in ham ö: pronounce it like the "ur" in murder ü: has no equivalent in English but can be described as pronouncing the sound ee with rounded lips. If you mean Russian: ё: pronounced like "yo" or "oh" If you mean French: vowels with two dots above them do not change in pronunciation. The dots just mean that the vowel is separate from the previous vowel, such as naïve.
Yes, diacritical marks are used above vowels in some languages to indicate pronunciation variations, stress, or tonal changes. They can help to guide correct pronunciation and distinguish between different sounds.
D. All of the above.
The horizontal line above vowels means the letter is a long vowel.
The long vowel symbol is a bar across the top of the letter, called a macron.The short vowel symbol is a U-shaped curved line called a breve.
Accents
A letter "u" with two dots above it is called an umlaut. In languages like German, it indicates a change in the pronunciation of the vowel, often making it sound as two separate vowels or modifying its sound.
The mark above the "a" is called an acute accent. In languages like French and Spanish, it indicates a change in pronunciation, typically signaling that the vowel should be pronounced with emphasis. In phonetic terms, it can alter the length or quality of the vowel sound.
Naakáí dinéʼiʼ "Person from Mexico" Naakáí means Mexico. The marks above the vowels are high tone marks. The mark between the e and i is a consonant called a glottal stop.
The long vowel symbol is a bar across the top of the letter, which is called a macron.The short vowel symbol is a U-shaped curved line called a breve.
A circumflex is a diacritic mark that looks like a little line or caret (^) used in certain languages to indicate various things, such as emphasis, modification, or historical pronunciation. In English, it is not commonly used, but in languages like French, it may appear above certain vowels to denote sound changes, such as â, ê, î, ô, û.
Long vowels are shown in the dictionary pronunciation guide with a - line above the letter.
Answer: none of the above. The original Aryans spoke several Indo-Iranian languages which are the ancestors of Farsi, Urdu, Hindi, and similar languages. Of the four languages given above, the Indo-Iranian languages are most similar to English, but that means little as the languages are completely non-intelligible to most English-speakers.