Ring (diacritic)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Diacritical marks

accent

acute accent ( ˊ )
double acute accent ( ˝ )
grave accent ( ˋ )

breve ( ˘ )
caron / háček ( ˇ )
cedilla ( ¸ )
circumflex ( ˆ )
diaeresis / umlaut ( ¨ )
dot ( · )

anunaasika ( ˙ )
anusvaara (  ̣ )

hook / dấu hỏi (  ̉ )
macron ( ˉ )
ogonek ( ˛ )
ring / kroužek ( ˚ )
rough breathing / spiritus asper (  ῾ )
smooth breathing / spiritus lenis (  ᾿ )

Marks sometimes used as diacritics

apostrophe ( )
bar ( | )
colon ( : )
comma ( , )
hyphen ( ˗ )
tilde ( ˜ )
titlo (  ҃ )

A ring diacritic may appear above (˚) or below (  ̥) letters. It may be combined with some letters of the extended Latin alphabets in various contexts.

Å å Ů ů

Contents

[edit] Ring above

The Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and Walloon character Å (å) is typically seen as an A with a ring above. However, in the languages in which it is used, the letter is seen as a unique symbol, rather than an A with a diacritic.

Other characters with a ring diacritic are Ů and ů (a Latin U with ring above). These characters are used in the Czech language (where the ring is known as a kroužek), together with háček and čárka above many other letters. This vowel "ů" shows how the pronunciation of various words evolved during the centuries. For example, the word "kůň" (a horse; pronounced [ku:ɲ]) used to be written "kóň", which evolved, along with pronunciation, into "kuoň". Ultimately, the vowel [o] disappeared completely, and it is only kept as the ring above "u". The letters ů and ú have the pronunciation (long [u:]). For historical reasons, ů can never be the first letter of the word; unlike ú is always the first letter of the word or the word root.

Ring above has been used in Lithuanian cyrillic alphabet promoted by Russian authorities at the last quarter of 19th century in the letter У̊/у̊, used to represent the /u̯ɔ/ diphthong (now written uo in contemporary Lithuanian orthography).

Many more characters can be created in Unicode using the 'combining ring above' U+030A, including the above mentioned у̊ (cyrillic у with ring above) or even ń̊ (n with acute and ring above). The standalone ring above symbol has the codepoint U+02DA.

[edit] Ring below

Unicode encodes "combining ring below" at U+0325 (  ̥). The diacritic is used in IPA to indicate voicelessness, and in Indo-European studies to indicate syllabicity ( corresponding to IPA [ɹ̩]).

1E00 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING BELOW
1E01 LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH RING BELOW

[edit] Half rings

Half rings also exist as diacritic marks, these are characters U+0351 (combining left half ring above) and U+0357 (combining left half ring below). These characters may be used with the International Phonetic Alphabet. They are here given with the lowercase a: and . These may or may not display correctly in your user agent.

Other, similar signs are in use in Armenian: the 'left half ring above' U+0559 ( ՙ ), and the Armenian comma or 'right half ring above' U+055A ( ՚ ).

The ring as a diacritic mark should not be confused with the dot above or comma above diacritic marks, with the combing o above (U+0366 ͦ), or with the degree sign °. Additionally this symbol Å (U+00C5) is the proper angstrom sign, though Unicode includes an angstrom sign symbol Å for use with in converting legacy applications in old code pages in certain East Asian languages which looks similar to Å.

[edit] External link

The Latin alphabet
Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo Pp Qq Rr Ss Tt Uu Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz
historypalaeographyderivationsdiacriticspunctuationnumeralsUnicodeISO 646list of letters