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Obsolete and nonstandard symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet

The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) possesses a variety of obsolete and nonstandard symbols. Throughout the history of the IPA, characters representing phonetic values have been modified or completely replaced. An example is ɷ for standard [ʊ]. Several symbols indicating secondary articulation have been dropped altogether, with the idea that they should be indicated with diacritics: ʮ for z̩ʷ is one. In addition, the rare voiceless implosive series ƥ ƭ ƭ̢ ƈ ƙ ʠ has been dropped.

Other characters have been added in for specific phonemes which do not possess a specific symbol in the IPA. Those studying modern Chinese phonology have used ɿ to represent the sound of -i in Pinyin hanzi which has been variously described as [ɨ], [ɹ̩], [z̩] or [ɯ]. (See the sections Vowels and Syllabic consonants of the article Standard Chinese phonology.)

There are also unsupported symbols from local traditions that find their way into publications that otherwise use the standard IPA. This is especially common with affricates such as ƛ, and many Americanist symbols.

While the IPA does not itself have a set of capital letters (the ones that look like capitals are actually small capitals), many languages have adopted symbols from the IPA as part of their orthographies, and in such cases they have invented capital variants of these. This is especially common in Africa. An example is Kabiyé of northern Togo, which has Ɔ Ɛ Ŋ Ɣ. Other pseudo-IPA capitals supported by Unicode are Ɓ/Ƃ Ƈ Ɗ/Ƌ Ə/Ǝ Ɠ Ħ Ɯ Ɲ Ɵ Ʃ (capital ʃ) Ʈ Ʊ Ʋ Ʒ. (See Case variants of IPA letters.)

Capital letters are also used as cover symbols in phonotactic descriptions: C=Consonant, V=Vowel, etc.

This list does not include commonplace extensions of the IPA, such as doubling a symbol for a greater degree of a feature ([aːː] extra-long [a], [ˈˈa] extra stress, [kʰʰ] strongly aspirated [k], and [a˞˞] extra-rhotic [a][1]), nor superscripting for a lesser degree of a feature ([ᵑɡ] slightly prenasalized [ɡ], [ᵗs] slightly affricated [s], and [ᵊ] epenthetic schwa). The asterisk, as in [k*] for the fortis stop of Korean, is the convention the IPA uses when it has no symbol for a phone or feature.

For symbols and values which were discarded by 1932, see History of the International Phonetic Alphabet.

Obsolete and/or nonstandard symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet
Symbol or
exemplar
Name Meaning Standard IPA
equivalent
Notes
? question mark glottal stop ʔ typewriter substitution
7 digit seven glottal stop ʔ typewriter substitution
' apostrophe glottal stop ʔ typewriter substitution
q q glottal stop ʔ used in Maltese, Khmer and Malayo–Polynesian languages transcriptions.
φ Greek phi voiceless bilabial fricative ɸ a mistake, typewriter substitution or similarity of shape
ß sharp s voiced bilabial fricative β a mistake, typewriter substitution or similarity of shape
,
or
integral symbol voiceless postalveolar fricative ʃ a mistake, typewriter substitution or similarity of shape
3 digit three voiced postalveolar fricative ʒ a mistake, typewriter substitution or similarity of shape; often confused with open-mid central unrounded vowel
đ d with stroke voiced dental fricative ð a mistake, typewriter substitution or similarity of shape
ƍ upside-down lowercase delta labialized voiced alveolar or dental fricative ðʷ, zʷ, intended for the voiced whistled sibilant, ɀ, of Shona and related languages[2]
σ lowercase sigma labialized voiceless alveolar or dental fricative θʷ, sʷ, intended for the voiceless whistled sibilant, ȿ, of Shona and related languages[2]
ƺ ezh with tail labialized voiced postalveolar fricative ʒᶣ, ʑʷ intended for w before front vowels in Twi;[2] may also be used for the lightly rounded English /ʒ/.
ƪ backwards esh with top loop labialized voiceless postalveolar fricative ʃᶣ, ɕʷ intended for hw before front vowels in Twi;[2] may also be used for the lightly rounded English /ʃ/.
ƻ barred digit two voiced alveolar affricate d͡z withdrawn 1976
ƾ or ʢ upside-down voiced epiglottal trill voiceless alveolar affricate t͡s withdrawn 1976
ƞ lowercase eta moraic nasal m, n, ŋ, ɴ̩ Intended for the moraic nasal /N/ of Japanese.[2] Withdrawn 1976
◌̡ palatal hook palatalization ɡ̟ ɬʲ ŋ̟ ɹʲ ɾʲ ɕ ʑ Typically used in the transcription of Slavic languages such as Russian. Superseded 1989
◌̢ retroflex hook r-colored vowels ɜ˞, ə˞ or ɝ, ɚ Superseded 1989; MODIFIER LETTER RHOTIC HOOK (U+02DE) is now preferred
unstressed central rhotic vowel r-colored vowel in American English ɜ˞, ə˞ or ɝ, ɚ Proposed in 1934, MODIFIER LETTER RHOTIC HOOK (U+02DE) is now preferred
ʃ ʒ t͡ʃ d͡ʒ alveolo-palatal consonants ɕ, ʑ, t͡ɕ, and d͡ʑ; respectively broad transcription; especially Japanologists and Koreanists
a a any open vowel Often a substitute for ɑ in printing when the distinction between a and ɑ is not needed.
ɑ lowercase alpha any open vowel Often a substitute for ɑ in printing when the distinction between a and ɑ is not needed.
a backwards a near-open front unrounded vowel æ Proposed in 1989, rejected[3]
c c t͡ʃ, t͡ɕ or sometimes t͡s. broad transcription
nv ligature close front rounded vowel y proposed in 1989, rejected[3]
ᵿ˞ barred horseshoe u with hook back sulcal vowel proposed in 1989, rejected[3]
w with left hook voiced labial-velar fricative (labialized voiced velar fricative) ɣʷ proposed in 1989, rejected[3]
letters with left-swinging top hook dental consonants proposed in 1989, rejected[3]
long-leg g voiced velar lateral approximant ʟ proposed in 1989, rejected[3]
hooktop ezh voiced velar fricative ɣ proposed in 1989, rejected[3]
double-loop g voiced velar fricative ɣ from 1895 to 1900, [q] represented that consonant before 1895, [ǥ] after 1900
double-loop g voiced velar plosive ɡ standard Unicode Basic Latin/ASCII lower-case g (U+0067) may have a double-loop g glyph. the preferred IPA single-loop g (U+0261) is in the IPA Extensions Unicode block. for a time it was proposed that the double-loop g might be used for [ɡ] and the single-loop g for [ᶃ] (ɡ̟),[2] but the distinction never caught on.
double-loop g voiced postalveolar affricate d͡ʒ used in Arabic transcriptions
single-loop g with stroke voiced velar fricative ɣ replaced double-loop g in 1900, then replaced by gamma [ɣ] around 1928-1930. the character ǥ may not have the single-loop shape in some fonts.
j j d͡ʒ, d͡ʑ or sometimes d͡z
ɟ upside-down f d͡ʒ or d͡ʑ
etc. subscript w labialization etc. mark may appear above letters with descenders like [ɡ] or [ŋ]. removed 1989
ʆ curly-tail esh voiceless alveolo-palatal fricative ɕ variant, also for Russian щ (now ɕ). removed 1989
ʓ curly-tail ezh voiced alveolo-palatal fricative ʑ variant, removed 1989
ȵ, ȡ, ȶ, ȴ curly-tail n, d, t, l alveolo-palatal consonants n̠ʲ, d̠ʲ, t̠ʲ, l̠ʲ or ɲ̟, ɟ˖, c̟, ʎ̟ used by some Sinologists.
ř r with caron voiced strident apico-alveolar trill Intended for ř in Czech and related languages. ř from 1909, replaced by ɼ in 1949, Withdrawn 1989
ɼ long-leg r voiced strident apico-alveolar trill Intended for ř in Czech and related languages. ř from 1909, replaced by ɼ in 1949, Withdrawn 1989
ɼ long-leg r syllabic alveolar trill a mistake
λ () lowercase lambda voiced palatal lateral approximant ʎ a mistake
λ () lowercase lambda voiced alveolar lateral affricate d͡ɮ used by Americanists
ƛ barred lowercase lambda voiceless alveolar lateral affricate t͡ɬ used by Americanists
ł lowercase l with stroke voiceless alveolar lateral fricative ɬ used by Americanists, also a typographic substitute
ł lowercase l with stroke velarized voiced alveolar lateral approximant ɫ used by Baltic transcriptions
small-capital Cyrillic el voiced uvular lateral approximant ʟ̠
š č ž s c z with caron postalveolar consonants ʃ t͡ʃ ʒ; ʂ ʈ͡ʂ ʐ used by Americanists, Uralicists, Semiticists, Slavicists
ǰ, ǧ, ǯ j, g, ezh with caron voiced postalveolar affricate d͡ʒ; ɖ͡ʐ used by Americanists, Slavicists
ć ĺ ń ś ź c l n s z dz with acute accent alveolo-palatals or palatals and postalveolar consonants t͡ɕ l̠ʲ n̠ʲ ɕ ʑ d͡ʑ; t͡ʃ ʎ ɲ ʃ ʒ d͡ʒ used by Slavicists
x, ɣ x, latin gamma voiceless and voiced uvular fricative (or voiced uvular approximant) χ, ʁ or χ, ʁ̞ broad transcriptions in Hindi, Arabic and Hebrew transcriptions
x with dot voiceless uvular fricative χ used by Americanists
X capital x voiceless uvular fricative χ a mistake
baby gamma close-mid back unrounded vowel ɤ proposed in 1989, rejected; LATIN SMALL LETTER RAMS HORN (U+0264) now represents both glyphs
ρ rho bilabial trill ʙ common before an official letter was adopted
ɉ j with stroke voiced post-palatal approximant ȷ̈
/ ᵿ barred small capital i / upsilon near-close central unrounded / rounded vowel ɨ̞ / ʉ̞, ɪ̈ / ʊ̈ used by the some English phoneticians, including the Oxford English Dictionary
ʚ closed epsilon open-mid front rounded vowel œ alternate symbol from 1904-1920s[4]
ʚ closed epsilon open-mid central rounded vowel ɞ removed 1996
ɷ closed omega near-close near-back rounded vowel ʊ longstanding alternate symbol until 1989
ω lowercase omega near-close near-back unrounded vowel ʊ̜ or ɯ̽ made from obsolete ɷ symbol. Also Bloch & Trager (1942) for [ɒ̝].
ɩ small iota near-close near-front unrounded vowel ɪ longstanding alternate symbol until 1989
ı dotless small i near-close near-front unrounded vowel ɪ a mistake or typographic substitute; or used by Americanists.
ȸ ȹ lowercase db and qp ligatures or lowercase footless phi and headless phi voiced and voiceless labiodential plosives Used by Africanists.
0, or Ø digit zero, slashed digit zero or uppercase slashed o null initial usually used in phonology to mean a spelling with no sound value. however, in Chinese and some Korean linguistics, some scholars use it for a weak glottal stop; the sound value of the first consonant of syllables started by a vowel.
ƥ ƭ 𝼉 ƈ ƙ ʠ hooktop p, t, ʈ, c, k, q voiceless implosives ɓ̥ ɗ̥ ᶑ̥ ʄ̊ ɠ̊ ʛ̊ or pʼ↓ tʼ↓ ʈʼ↓ cʼ↓ kʼ↓ qʼ↓ brief additions to the IPA; removed 1993
ʇ upside-down t dental click ǀ removed 1989; see click letters
ʗ stretched (or descended) c alveolar click ǃ removed 1989; see click letters
ʖ upside-down pharyngeal fricative alveolar lateral click ǁ removed 1989; see click letters
ʞ upside-down k originally a palatal click, reinterpreted as a velar click velar articulation was judged impossible.[5] later reanalyzed and found paralinguistically. For several years used for a voiceless velodorsal stop in the extIPA.[6]
𝼋 (⨎) esh with two bars fricated palatal click ǂǂ or ǃ͡s uncommon letter in Ekoka !Kung transcription
triple vertical bar retroflex lateral click ǁ˞
ȣ ou close-mid back unrounded vowel or voiced velar fricative ɤ or ɣ a common mistake
r r alveolar trill any rhotic sound (including r-colored vowels) broad transcription
ʀ or R small capital or uppercase r long vowel or prolonged moraic N ː used by Japanologists. This symbol represents phonemic long vowel (such as //) or /aR/) or rarely prolonged moraic N (hatsuon).
reversed small capital r voiced epiglottal trill[citation needed] ʀ̠ or ʢ rare
ɿ long i with left hook syllabic denti-alveolar approximant ɹ̩,[7] ɹ̩, z̩, ◌͡ɯ[8] used by Sinologists, and by Japanologists specifically for the Miyako language
ʅ viby i syllabic retroflex approximant ɹ̩,[7] ɻ̩, ʐ̩, ◌͡ɨ used by Sinologists. See Chinese vowels
ʮ long y with left hook labialized syllabic denti-alveolar approximant ɹ̩ʷ, z̩ʷ, ◌͡u used by Sinologists
ʯ viby ü or viby y labialized syllabic retroflex approximant ɻ̩ʷ, ʐ̩ʷ, ◌͡ʉ used by Sinologists
small capital a open central unrounded vowel ä, a̠, ɑ̈, ɑ̟, ɐ̞ used by Sinologists
barred alpha open central unrounded vowel ä, a̠, ɑ̈, ɑ̟, ɐ̞ used by Teuthonista
small capital e mid front unrounded vowel e̞, ɛ̝ Bloch & Trager (1942). Used by Sinologists and some Koreanists
barred e close-mid central unrounded vowel ɘ used by Teuthonista
small capital turned e mid back unrounded vowel ɤ̞, ʌ̝ used by some Koreanists who study Gyeongsang dialect, where there is no phonemic differentiation between /ʌ/ (RR eo; Hangul ㅓ) and /ɯ/ (RR eu; Hangul ㅡ).[citation needed]
small capital omega mid back rounded vowel o̞, ɔ̝ Used by Sinologists and some Koreanists
barred o close-mid central rounded vowel ɵ used by Teuthonista
ω, Ω omega mid back rounded vowel o̞, ɔ̝ Bloch & Trager (1942).
small capital u near-close near-back rounded vowel ʊ, ʊ̹ Americanist notation
B G Ɠ H I L N Œ R Y uppercase letters small сарs ʙ ɢ ʛ ʜ ɪ ʟ ɴ ɶ ʀ ʏ often mistaken by typing, uppercase alternatives to symbols shaped like small capitals
small capital q pharyngeal stop ʡ proposed for the pharyngeal stop of Formosan languages.
small capital q sokuon used by Japanologists.
Q capital Q used by Japanologists.
l l all coronal liquid consonants. broad transcription, mainly Koreanologists.
𝼆 𝼄 belted letters voiceless lateral fricatives (retroflex, palatal, velar, and alveolar) ɭ̥˔ ʎ̥˔ ʟ̥˔ now in the extIPA[6]
ʎ upside-down y alveolo-palatal lateral approximant [ʎ̟] or [l̠ʲ] broad transcription, mainly Koreanologists and Sinologists
ɲ n with left hook alveolo-palatal nasal [ɲ̟] or [n̠ʲ] broad transcription, mainly Koreanologists, Sinologists, and Japanologists
w with hook bilabial flap ⱱ̟
𝼈 turned r with long leg and retroflex hook retroflex lateral flap ɭ̆
ɏ barred y close central compressed vowel ÿ
ʏ (ұ) barred small capital y near-close central compressed vowel ʏ̈
ұ barred straight y (Cyrillic straight u) near-close near-back unrounded vowel [ʊ̜] or [ɯ̽] used in Mande studies[9]
◌̣ underdot retroflex or r-colored vowels ɑ˞ etc.
k', t', etc. apostrophe no audible release , , etc. removed
k', t', etc. apostrophe palatalization , , etc. common in X-SAMPA
K T etc. uppercase letters (not small capitals) fortis , etc. used by some Koreanologists
ɔ̩ vowel with tilted line below lower-pitched rising / falling tone contour for languages that distinguish multiple rising or falling tones
reversed comma above weak (sometimes normal) aspiration k t (sometimes ) First symbol may be left single quotation mark (U+2018) or modifier letter apostrophe (U+02BC); second symbol may be single high-reversed-9 quotation mark (U+201B) or modifier letter reversed comma (U+02BD)
ʦ ʣ ʧ ʤ ʨ ʥ ligatures affricates t͡s d͡z t͡ʃ d͡ʒ ʈ͡ʂ ɖ͡ʐ t͡ɕ d͡ʑ formerly acceptable variants[10]
p′ s′ t′ etc. prime palatalization etc. traditional Irish phonology transcription
etc. combining apostrophe palatalization etc. traditional Russian phonology transcription
* asterisk syntactic gemination (none) used in some Italian dictionaries
˹ open corner release/burst (none) IPA number 490
d d͡ɮ d͡z l ɫ ɬ ɮ n r ɹ ɾ s t t͡ɬ s z without diacritics dental consonants d̪͡ɮ̪ d̪͡z̪ ɫ̪ ɬ̪ ɮ̪ ð̞ ɾ̪ t̪͡ɬ̪ t̪͡s̪ broad transcriptions; in some English dialects, /ð̞/ often described as ⟨ɹ̪⟩ for /rɹ/
β ð ʝ ɣ ʁ ʕ or e ø ɘ ɵ ɤ o without diacritics approximant consonants or mid vowels β̞ ð̞ j ɰ ʁ̞ ʕ̞ or ø̞ ə ɵ̞ ɤ̞ broad transcriptions; in Spanish, /j/ and /ɰ/ often described as ⟨ʝ̞⟩ and ⟨ɣ̞
ɛ œ ɜ ɞ ʌ ɔ without diacritics mid vowels ø̞ ə ɵ̞ ɤ̞ broad transcriptions; for example in some languages, // and // maybe described as ⟨ɛ̝⟩ and ⟨ɔ̝⟩, also /ə/ maybe described as ⟨ɘ̞⟩ or ⟨ɜ̝
ɪ ʊ a ɒ without diacritics central vowels ɪ̈ ʊ̈ ä ɒ̈ broad transcriptions; in some English dialects, /ä/ often described as ⟨ɑ̈⟩ in English for /ɑ/
c or ȼ c or stroked c voiceless alveolar affricate t͡s Americanist notation
ʒ ezh voiced alveolar affricate d͡z Americanist notation
y y voiced palatal approximant j Americanist notation
ä a with diaeresis open front unrounded vowel or near-open front unrounded vowel a or æ Uralicist notation
ö o with diaeresis mid front rounded vowel ø̞ Americanist and Uralicist notation
ü u with diaeresis close front rounded vowel y Americanist and Uralicist notation
k’ etc. right single quotation mark Korean fortis etc. used by some Koreanists for fortis sounds; equivalent to ⟨k*⟩, etc. above.
◌⸋ box unreleased ◌̚ used where IPA ◌̚ would get confused with the corners used to indicate change of pitch in the Japanese pitch accent system
◌ʱ breathy/ voiced aspiration ◌̤
◌ˀ creaky voice/ glottalization ◌̰
◌̴ velarization ◌ˠ
ˉ◌, ˗◌, ˍ◌ high, mid and low-level tone or intonation removed
˭◌, ₌◌ extra-high and extra-low level tone or intonation removed
ˋ◌, ˴◌, ˎ◌ falling or high falling, mid falling and low-falling tone or intonation removed
ˊ◌, [NA], ˏ◌ (high) rising and low rising tone or intonation removed
ˇ◌, ˬ◌ (high) dipping and low dipping (falling-rising) tone or intonation removed
ˆ◌, ꞈ◌ peaking (rising-falling) tone or intonation removed
˜◌, ̰◌ "wavy" tone or intonation removed
˙◌, ·◌, .◌ atonic syllable with high, mid, and low pitch; respectively removed
◌́, ◌̂, ◌̀, ◌̆ Acute accent, circumflex, grave accent, breve stress symbols:

primary stress, weakened primary stress, secondary stress, and no stress; respectively

ˈˈ◌, ˈ◌, ˌ◌, ◌ some English phoneticians and phonologists use acute and grave accents as primary and secondary stress symbols. Some linguists[11] use the circumflex as weakened primary stress in compound words and the breve as no stress. these symbols are also written on the English spellings not just other IPA symbols.
◌̩, ◌̍ Vertical line below or above moraic used by Japanologists. In the standard IPA, these symbols represents syllabic sounds, but Japanologists use them for phonetic variants (except for nasal vowels) of the moraic N ([n̩, ɴ̩, ŋ̍ (or ŋ̩), ]).
◌̄, ◌́, ◌̌, ◌̀ Macron, acute accent, caron, grave accent Chinese tones ◌́, ◌̌, ◌̀, ◌̂ or similar, depending on dialect and analysis, or Chao tone letters used by Sinologists with the values the symbols have in Hanyu Pinyin. the standard IPA values of these diacritics are: mid, high, rising, and low tone.

See also edit

Footnotes or references edit

  1. ^ Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 313–314.
  2. ^ a b c d e f 1949 Principles of the IPA
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Henton, C. G. (1988). 5. Individual symbols and diacritics. Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 18(02), 85. doi:10.1017/s0025100300003686
  4. ^ 1912 Principles of the IPA
  5. ^ An impossible sound
  6. ^ a b "extIPA Symbols for Disordered Speech (Revised to 2015)" (PDF). Retrieved 15 February 2018.
  7. ^ a b Lee-Kim, Sang-Im (December 2014). "Revisiting Mandarin 'apical vowels': An articulatory and acoustic study". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 44 (3): 261–282. doi:10.1017/S0025100314000267. S2CID 16432272.
  8. ^ Lee, Wai-Sum; Zee, Eric (June 2003). "Standard Chinese (Beijing)". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 33 (1): 109–112. doi:10.1017/S0025100303001208.
  9. ^ Roberts, David; Boyd, Ginger; Merz, Johannes; Vydrin, Valentin (2020). "Quantifying written ambiguities in tone languages: A comparative study of Elip, Mbelime, and Eastern Dan". Language Documentation & Conservation. 14: 108–138. hdl:10125/24915.
  10. ^ Pullum, Geoffrey K.; William A. Ladusaw (1996). Phonetic Symbol Guide (2nd ed.). University of Chicago Press. p. 180. ISBN 0-226-68535-7.
  11. ^ Trager, George L., and Henry Lee Smith Jr. 1951. An Outline of English Structure. Studies in Linguistics: Occasional Papers 3. Norman, Okla.: Battenburg Press.

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Obsolete and nonstandard symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters The International Phonetic Alphabet IPA possesses a variety of obsolete and nonstandard symbols Throughout the history of the IPA characters representing phonetic values have been modified or completely replaced An example is ɷ for standard ʊ Several symbols indicating secondary articulation have been dropped altogether with the idea that they should be indicated with diacritics ʮ for z ʷ is one In addition the rare voiceless implosive series ƥ ƭ ƭ ƈ ƙ ʠ has been dropped Other characters have been added in for specific phonemes which do not possess a specific symbol in the IPA Those studying modern Chinese phonology have used ɿ to represent the sound of i in Pinyin hanzi which has been variously described as ɨ ɹ z or ɯ See the sections Vowels and Syllabic consonants of the article Standard Chinese phonology There are also unsupported symbols from local traditions that find their way into publications that otherwise use the standard IPA This is especially common with affricates such as ƛ and many Americanist symbols While the IPA does not itself have a set of capital letters the ones that look like capitals are actually small capitals many languages have adopted symbols from the IPA as part of their orthographies and in such cases they have invented capital variants of these This is especially common in Africa An example is Kabiye of northern Togo which has Ɔ Ɛ Ŋ Ɣ Other pseudo IPA capitals supported by Unicode are Ɓ Ƃ Ƈ Ɗ Ƌ E Ǝ Ɠ Ħ Ɯ Ɲ Ɵ Ʃ capital ʃ Ʈ Ʊ Ʋ Ʒ See Case variants of IPA letters Capital letters are also used as cover symbols in phonotactic descriptions C Consonant V Vowel etc This list does not include commonplace extensions of the IPA such as doubling a symbol for a greater degree of a feature aːː extra long a ˈˈa extra stress kʰʰ strongly aspirated k and a extra rhotic a 1 nor superscripting for a lesser degree of a feature ᵑɡ slightly prenasalized ɡ ᵗs slightly affricated s and ᵊ epenthetic schwa The asterisk as in k for the fortis stop of Korean is the convention the IPA uses when it has no symbol for a phone or feature For symbols and values which were discarded by 1932 see History of the International Phonetic Alphabet Obsolete and or nonstandard symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet Symbol orexemplar Name Meaning Standard IPAequivalent Notes question mark glottal stop ʔ typewriter substitution 7 digit seven glottal stop ʔ typewriter substitution apostrophe glottal stop ʔ typewriter substitution q q glottal stop ʔ used in Maltese Khmer and Malayo Polynesian languages transcriptions f Greek phi voiceless bilabial fricative ɸ a mistake typewriter substitution or similarity of shape ss sharp s voiced bilabial fricative b a mistake typewriter substitution or similarity of shape or displaystyle displaystyle int integral symbol voiceless postalveolar fricative ʃ a mistake typewriter substitution or similarity of shape 3 digit three voiced postalveolar fricative ʒ a mistake typewriter substitution or similarity of shape often confused with open mid central unrounded vowel đ d with stroke voiced dental fricative d a mistake typewriter substitution or similarity of shape ƍ upside down lowercase delta labialized voiced alveolar or dental fricative dʷ zʷ z intended for the voiced whistled sibilant ɀ of Shona and related languages 2 s lowercase sigma labialized voiceless alveolar or dental fricative 8ʷ sʷ s intended for the voiceless whistled sibilant ȿ of Shona and related languages 2 ƺ ezh with tail labialized voiced postalveolar fricative ʒᶣ ʑʷ intended for w before front vowels in Twi 2 may also be used for the lightly rounded English ʒ ƪ backwards esh with top loop labialized voiceless postalveolar fricative ʃᶣ ɕʷ intended for hw before front vowels in Twi 2 may also be used for the lightly rounded English ʃ ƻ barred digit two voiced alveolar affricate d z withdrawn 1976 ƾ or ʢ upside down voiced epiglottal trill voiceless alveolar affricate t s withdrawn 1976 ƞ lowercase eta moraic nasal m n ŋ ɴ Intended for the moraic nasal N of Japanese 2 Withdrawn 1976 palatal hook palatalization bʲ cʲ dʲ fʲ ɡ hʲ k lʲ ɬʲ mʲ nʲ ŋ pʲ rʲ ɹʲ ɾʲ sʲ ɕ tʲ vʲ x zʲ ʑ Typically used in the transcription of Slavic languages such as Russian Superseded 1989 retroflex hook r colored vowels ɜ e or ɝ ɚ Superseded 1989 MODIFIER LETTER RHOTIC HOOK U 02DE is now preferred unstressed central rhotic vowel r colored vowel in American English ɜ e or ɝ ɚ Proposed in 1934 MODIFIER LETTER RHOTIC HOOK U 02DE is now preferred ʃ ʒ t ʃ d ʒ alveolo palatal consonants ɕ ʑ t ɕ and d ʑ respectively broad transcription especially Japanologists and Koreanists a a any open vowel Often a substitute for ɑ in printing when the distinction between a and ɑ is not needed ɑ lowercase alpha any open vowel Often a substitute for ɑ in printing when the distinction between a and ɑ is not needed a backwards a near open front unrounded vowel ae Proposed in 1989 rejected 3 c c t ʃ t ɕ or sometimes t s broad transcription nv ligature close front rounded vowel y proposed in 1989 rejected 3 ᵿ barred horseshoe u with hook back sulcal vowel proposed in 1989 rejected 3 w with left hook voiced labial velar fricative labialized voiced velar fricative ɣʷ proposed in 1989 rejected 3 letters with left swinging top hook dental consonants d l n r t proposed in 1989 rejected 3 long leg g voiced velar lateral approximant ʟ proposed in 1989 rejected 3 ꝣ hooktop ezh voiced velar fricative ɣ proposed in 1989 rejected 3 double loop g voiced velar fricative ɣ from 1895 to 1900 q represented that consonant before 1895 ǥ after 1900 double loop g voiced velar plosive ɡ standard Unicode Basic Latin ASCII lower case g U 0067 may have a double loop g glyph the preferred IPA single loop g U 0261 is in the IPA Extensions Unicode block for a time it was proposed that the double loop g might be used for ɡ and the single loop g for ᶃ ɡ 2 but the distinction never caught on double loop g voiced postalveolar affricate d ʒ used in Arabic transcriptions single loop g with stroke voiced velar fricative ɣ replaced double loop g in 1900 then replaced by gamma ɣ around 1928 1930 the character ǥ may not have the single loop shape in some fonts j j d ʒ d ʑ or sometimes d z ɟ upside down f d ʒ or d ʑ k etc subscript w labialization kʷ etc mark may appear above letters with descenders like ɡ or ŋ removed 1989 ʆ curly tail esh voiceless alveolo palatal fricative ɕ variant also for Russian sh now ɕ removed 1989 ʓ curly tail ezh voiced alveolo palatal fricative ʑ variant removed 1989 ȵ ȡ ȶ ȴ curly tail n d t l alveolo palatal consonants n ʲ d ʲ t ʲ l ʲ or ɲ ɟ c ʎ used by some Sinologists r r with caron voiced strident apico alveolar trill r Intended for r in Czech and related languages r from 1909 replaced by ɼ in 1949 Withdrawn 1989 ɼ long leg r voiced strident apico alveolar trill r Intended for r in Czech and related languages r from 1909 replaced by ɼ in 1949 Withdrawn 1989 ɼ long leg r syllabic alveolar trill r a mistake l lowercase lambda voiced palatal lateral approximant ʎ a mistake l lowercase lambda voiced alveolar lateral affricate d ɮ used by Americanists ƛ barred lowercase lambda voiceless alveolar lateral affricate t ɬ used by Americanists l lowercase l with stroke voiceless alveolar lateral fricative ɬ used by Americanists also a typographic substitute l lowercase l with stroke velarized voiced alveolar lateral approximant ɫ used by Baltic transcriptions ᴫ small capital Cyrillic el voiced uvular lateral approximant ʟ s c z s c z with caron postalveolar consonants ʃ t ʃ ʒ ʂ ʈ ʂ ʐ used by Americanists Uralicists Semiticists Slavicists ǰ ǧ ǯ j g ezh with caron voiced postalveolar affricate d ʒ ɖ ʐ used by Americanists Slavicists c ĺ n s z dz c l n s z dz with acute accent alveolo palatals or palatals and postalveolar consonants t ɕ l ʲ n ʲ ɕ ʑ d ʑ t ʃ ʎ ɲ ʃ ʒ d ʒ used by Slavicists x ɣ x latin gamma voiceless and voiced uvular fricative or voiced uvular approximant x ʁ or x ʁ broad transcriptions in Hindi Arabic and Hebrew transcriptions ẋ x with dot voiceless uvular fricative x used by Americanists X capital x voiceless uvular fricative x a mistake baby gamma close mid back unrounded vowel ɤ proposed in 1989 rejected LATIN SMALL LETTER RAMS HORN U 0264 now represents both glyphs r rho bilabial trill ʙ common before an official letter was adopted ɉ j with stroke voiced post palatal approximant ȷ ᵻ ᵿ barred small capital i upsilon near close central unrounded rounded vowel ɨ ʉ ɪ ʊ used by the some English phoneticians including the Oxford English Dictionary ʚ closed epsilon open mid front rounded vowel œ alternate symbol from 1904 1920s 4 ʚ closed epsilon open mid central rounded vowel ɞ removed 1996 ɷ closed omega near close near back rounded vowel ʊ longstanding alternate symbol until 1989 w lowercase omega near close near back unrounded vowel ʊ or ɯ made from obsolete ɷ symbol Also Bloch amp Trager 1942 for ɒ ɩ small iota near close near front unrounded vowel ɪ longstanding alternate symbol until 1989 i dotless small i near close near front unrounded vowel ɪ a mistake or typographic substitute or used by Americanists ȸ ȹ lowercase db and qp ligatures or lowercase footless phi and headless phi voiced and voiceless labiodential plosives b p Used by Africanists 0 or O digit zero slashed digit zero or uppercase slashed o null initial usually used in phonology to mean a spelling with no sound value however in Chinese and some Korean linguistics some scholars use it for a weak glottal stop the sound value of the first consonant of syllables started by a vowel ƥ ƭ ƈ ƙ ʠ hooktop p t ʈ c k q voiceless implosives ɓ ɗ ᶑ ʄ ɠ ʛ or pʼ tʼ ʈʼ cʼ kʼ qʼ brief additions to the IPA removed 1993 ʇ upside down t dental click ǀ removed 1989 see click letters ʗ stretched or descended c alveolar click ǃ removed 1989 see click letters ʖ upside down pharyngeal fricative alveolar lateral click ǁ removed 1989 see click letters ʞ upside down k originally a palatal click reinterpreted as a velar click velar articulation was judged impossible 5 later reanalyzed and found paralinguistically For several years used for a voiceless velodorsal stop in the extIPA 6 esh with two bars fricated palatal click ǂǂ or ǃ s uncommon letter in Ekoka Kung transcription triple vertical bar retroflex lateral click ǁ ȣ ou close mid back unrounded vowel or voiced velar fricative ɤ or ɣ a common mistake r r alveolar trill any rhotic sound including r colored vowels broad transcription ʀ or R small capital or uppercase r long vowel or prolonged moraic N ː used by Japanologists This symbol represents phonemic long vowel such as aʀ or aR or rarely prolonged moraic N hatsuon ᴙ reversed small capital r voiced epiglottal trill citation needed ʀ or ʢ rare ɿ long i with left hook syllabic denti alveolar approximant ɹ 7 ɹ z ɯ 8 used by Sinologists and by Japanologists specifically for the Miyako language ʅ viby i syllabic retroflex approximant ɹ 7 ɻ ʐ ɨ used by Sinologists See Chinese vowels ʮ long y with left hook labialized syllabic denti alveolar approximant ɹ ʷ z ʷ u used by Sinologists ʯ viby u or viby y labialized syllabic retroflex approximant ɻ ʷ ʐ ʷ ʉ used by Sinologists ᴀ small capital a open central unrounded vowel a a ɑ ɑ ɐ used by Sinologists ꬰ barred alpha open central unrounded vowel a a ɑ ɑ ɐ used by Teuthonista ᴇ small capital e mid front unrounded vowel e ɛ Bloch amp Trager 1942 Used by Sinologists and some Koreanists ꬳ barred e close mid central unrounded vowel ɘ used by Teuthonista ⱻ small capital turned e mid back unrounded vowel ɤ ʌ used by some Koreanists who study Gyeongsang dialect where there is no phonemic differentiation between ʌ RR eo Hangul ㅓ and ɯ RR eu Hangul ㅡ citation needed ꭥ small capital omega mid back rounded vowel o ɔ Used by Sinologists and some Koreanists ꝋ barred o close mid central rounded vowel ɵ used by Teuthonista w W omega mid back rounded vowel o ɔ Bloch amp Trager 1942 ᴜ small capital u near close near back rounded vowel ʊ ʊ Americanist notation B G Ɠ H I L N Œ R Y uppercase letters small sars ʙ ɢ ʛ ʜ ɪ ʟ ɴ ɶ ʀ ʏ often mistaken by typing uppercase alternatives to symbols shaped like small capitals ꞯ small capital q pharyngeal stop ʡ proposed for the pharyngeal stop of Formosan languages ꞯ small capital q sokuon used by Japanologists Q capital Q used by Japanologists l l all coronal liquid consonants broad transcription mainly Koreanologists ꞎ belted letters voiceless lateral fricatives retroflex palatal velar and alveolar ɭ ʎ ʟ now in the extIPA 6 ʎ upside down y alveolo palatal lateral approximant ʎ or l ʲ broad transcription mainly Koreanologists and Sinologists ɲ n with left hook alveolo palatal nasal ɲ or n ʲ broad transcription mainly Koreanologists Sinologists and Japanologists ⱳ w with hook bilabial flap ⱱ turned r with long leg and retroflex hook retroflex lateral flap ɭ ɏ barred y close central compressed vowel y ʏ u barred small capital y near close central compressed vowel ʏ u barred straight y Cyrillic straight u near close near back unrounded vowel ʊ or ɯ used in Mande studies 9 underdot retroflex or r colored vowels ɑ o etc k t etc apostrophe no audible release k t etc removed k t etc apostrophe palatalization k tʲ etc common in X SAMPA K T etc uppercase letters not small capitals fortis k t etc used by some Koreanologists ɔ vowel with tilted line below lower pitched rising falling tone contour for languages that distinguish multiple rising or falling tones kʻ tʻ reversed comma above weak sometimes normal aspiration k t sometimes kʰ tʰ First symbol may be left single quotation mark U 2018 or modifier letter apostrophe U 02BC second symbol may be single high reversed 9 quotation mark U 201B or modifier letter reversed comma U 02BD ʦ ʣ ʧ ʤ ꭧ ꭦ ʨ ʥ ligatures affricates t s d z t ʃ d ʒ ʈ ʂ ɖ ʐ t ɕ d ʑ formerly acceptable variants 10 p s t etc prime palatalization pʲ sʲ tʲ etc traditional Irish phonology transcription pʼ sʼ tʼ etc combining apostrophe palatalization pʲ sʲ tʲ etc traditional Russian phonology transcription asterisk syntactic gemination none used in some Italian dictionaries open corner release burst none IPA number 490 d d ɮ d z l ɫ ɬ ɮ n r ɹ ɾ s t t ɬ s z without diacritics dental consonants d d ɮ d z l ɫ ɬ ɮ n r d ɾ s t t ɬ t s z broad transcriptions in some English dialects d often described as ɹ for r ɹ b d ʝ ɣ ʁ ʕ or e o ɘ ɵ ɤ o without diacritics approximant consonants or mid vowels b d j ɰ ʁ ʕ or e o e ɵ ɤ o broad transcriptions in Spanish j and ɰ often described as ʝ and ɣ ɛ œ ɜ ɞ ʌ ɔ without diacritics mid vowels e o e ɵ ɤ o broad transcriptions for example in some languages e and o maybe described as ɛ and ɔ also e maybe described as ɘ or ɜ ɪ ʊ a ɒ without diacritics central vowels ɪ ʊ a ɒ broad transcriptions in some English dialects a often described as ɑ in English for ɑ c or ȼ c or stroked c voiceless alveolar affricate t s Americanist notation ʒ ezh voiced alveolar affricate d z Americanist notation y y voiced palatal approximant j Americanist notation a a with diaeresis open front unrounded vowel or near open front unrounded vowel a or ae Uralicist notation o o with diaeresis mid front rounded vowel o Americanist and Uralicist notation u u with diaeresis close front rounded vowel y Americanist and Uralicist notation k etc right single quotation mark Korean fortis k etc used by some Koreanists for fortis sounds equivalent to k etc above box unreleased used where IPA would get confused with the corners used to indicate change of pitch in the Japanese pitch accent system ʱ breathy voiced aspiration ˀ creaky voice glottalization velarization ˠ ˉ ˍ high mid and low level tone or intonation removed extra high and extra low level tone or intonation removed ˋ ˎ falling or high falling mid falling and low falling tone or intonation removed ˊ NA ˏ high rising and low rising tone or intonation removed ˇ ˬ high dipping and low dipping falling rising tone or intonation removed ˆ ꞈ peaking rising falling tone or intonation removed wavy tone or intonation removed atonic syllable with high mid and low pitch respectively removed Acute accent circumflex grave accent breve stress symbols primary stress weakened primary stress secondary stress and no stress respectively ˈˈ ˈ ˌ some English phoneticians and phonologists use acute and grave accents as primary and secondary stress symbols Some linguists 11 use the circumflex as weakened primary stress in compound words and the breve as no stress these symbols are also written on the English spellings not just other IPA symbols Vertical line below or above moraic used by Japanologists In the standard IPA these symbols represents syllabic sounds but Japanologists use them for phonetic variants except for nasal vowels of the moraic N n ɴ ŋ or ŋ m Macron acute accent caron grave accent Chinese tones or similar depending on dialect and analysis or Chao tone letters used by Sinologists with the values the symbols have in Hanyu Pinyin the standard IPA values of these diacritics are mid high rising and low tone See also editHistory of the IPA Americanist phonetic notation Uralic Phonetic AlphabetFootnotes or references edit Ladefoged Peter Maddieson Ian 1996 Sounds of the World s Languages Oxford Blackwell pp 313 314 a b c d e f 1949 Principles of the IPA a b c d e f g Henton C G 1988 5 Individual symbols and diacritics Journal of the International Phonetic Association 18 02 85 doi 10 1017 s0025100300003686 1912 Principles of the IPA An impossible sound a b extIPA Symbols for Disordered Speech Revised to 2015 PDF Retrieved 15 February 2018 a b Lee Kim Sang Im December 2014 Revisiting Mandarin apical vowels An articulatory and acoustic study Journal of the International Phonetic Association 44 3 261 282 doi 10 1017 S0025100314000267 S2CID 16432272 Lee Wai Sum Zee Eric June 2003 Standard Chinese Beijing Journal of the International Phonetic Association 33 1 109 112 doi 10 1017 S0025100303001208 Roberts David Boyd Ginger Merz Johannes Vydrin Valentin 2020 Quantifying written ambiguities in tone languages A comparative study of Elip Mbelime and Eastern Dan Language Documentation amp Conservation 14 108 138 hdl 10125 24915 Pullum Geoffrey K William A Ladusaw 1996 Phonetic Symbol Guide 2nd ed University of Chicago Press p 180 ISBN 0 226 68535 7 Trager George L and Henry Lee Smith Jr 1951 An Outline of English Structure Studies in Linguistics Occasional Papers 3 Norman Okla Battenburg Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Obsolete and nonstandard symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet amp oldid 1220704557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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