Near-close near-front rounded vowel
Near-close near-front rounded vowel |
ʏ |
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IPA number |
320 |
Encoding |
Entity (decimal) |
ʏ |
Unicode (hex) |
U+028F |
X-SAMPA |
Y |
Kirshenbaum |
I. |
Sound |
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The near-close near-front rounded vowel, or near-high near-front 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 ⟨ʏ⟩, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is Y.
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.
In most languages this rounded vowel is pronounced with compressed lips ('exolabial'). However, in a few cases the lips are protruded ('endolabial'). This is the case with Swedish, which contrasts the two types of rounding.
Near-close near-front compressed vowel
Features
Occurrence
Note: Since front rounded vowels are assumed to have compression, and few descriptions cover the distinction, some of the following may actually have protrusion.
Near-close near-front protruded vowel
Near-close near-front protruded vowel |
ʏ̫ |
ʏʷ |
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Catford notes that most languages with rounded front and back vowels use distinct types of labialization, protruded back vowels and compressed front vowels. However, a few languages, such as Scandinavian ones, have protruded front vowels. One of these, Swedish, even contrasts the two types of rounding in front vowels.[2]
As there are no diacritics in the IPA to distinguish protruded and compressed rounding, old diacritic for labialization, ⟨◌̫⟩, will be used here as an ad hoc symbol for protruded front vowels. (Another possible transcription is ⟨ʏʷ⟩ or ⟨ɪʷ⟩ (a near-front near-close vowel modified by endolabialization), but this could be misread as a diphthong.)
Features
Occurrence
References
- ^ "The dialects in the South of England: phonology", pp. 188, 191-192
- ^ Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-19814-8.
Bibliography
- Jones, Daniel; Dennis, Ward (1969), The Phonetics of Russian, Cambridge University Press
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These tables contain phonetic symbols, which may not display correctly in some browsers. [Help] |
Where symbols appear in pairs, left—right represent the voiceless—voiced consonants. |
Shaded areas denote pulmonic articulations judged to be impossible. |
* Symbol not defined in IPA. |
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Chart image |
Pulmonics · Non-pulmonics · Affricates · Co-articulated
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