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Case variants of IPA letters

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Capital variants of the IPA letters used in English, as designed by Michael Everson.[1]

With the adoption of letters from the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) in various national alphabets, letter case forms have been developed. This usually means capital (uppercase) forms were developed, but in the case of the glottal stop ʔ, both uppercase ⟨Ɂ⟩ and lowercase ⟨ɂ⟩ are used.

The adoption of IPA letters has been particularly notable in Sub-Saharan Africa, in languages such as Hausa, Fula, Akan, Gbe languages, Manding languages, and Lingala. The most common are open o Ɔ ɔ, open e Ɛ ɛ, and eng Ŋ ŋ, but several others are found. Kabiyé of northern Togo, for example, has Ɔ ɔ, Ɛ ɛ, Ɖ ɖ, Ŋ ŋ, Ɣ ɣ, Ʃ ʃ, Ʊ ʊ (or Ʋ ʋ), as in this newspaper headline:

MBƱ AJƐYA KIGBƐNDƱƱ ŊGBƐYƐ KEDIƔZAƔ SƆSƆƆ TƆM SE.

Some of the IPA letters that were adopted into language orthographies have since become obsolete in the IPA itself.

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Transcription

Chart

IPA Uppercase Lowercase
ɑ
ɒ
ɐ
ɓ Ɓ, Ƃ
β ꞵ (Latin beta)
ɔ Ɔ
ƈ Ƈ
[2]
ð Ð
ɖ Ɖ, Ɗ
ɗ Ɗ
ə Ə, Ǝ
ɛ Ɛ
ɜ [3]
ɡ Ɡ,[3] G
ɠ Ɠ
ɣ Ɣ
ɤ Ɤ [pending] [4]
ħ Ħ
ɦ
ɥ
ɨ Ɨ
ɪ [5]
ɩ Ɩ
ʝ
ƙ Ƙ
ʞ
ɫ
ɬ [6]
ɱ
ɯ Ɯ
ŋ Ŋ
ɲ Ɲ
ƞ Ƞ
ɵ Ɵ
ƥ Ƥ
ɋ Ɋ
ɽ
ʀ Ʀ
ʂ [2]
ʃ Ʃ
ʈ Ʈ, Ŧ[7]
ƭ Ƭ
ʇ
ʉ Ʉ
ʊ Ʊ
ɷ [8]
ʋ Ʋ
ʌ Ʌ
χ ꭓ (Latin chi)
[2]
ʒ Ʒ, reversed Ʃ[5]
θ ϴ[5][7]
ɸ Φ
ʔ Ɂ ɂ

Others letters are the graphic equivalent of IPA capitals, but are not identified with the IPA. Examples are ɟ Ɉ (the capital of ɉ), ʎ ⅄ (the capital of λ in Americanist usage),[7] ɹ ꓤ.

References

  1. ^ Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland: an edition printed in the International Phonetic Alphabet. Cathair na Mart: Evertype, 2014.
  2. ^ a b c West, Andrew; Chan, Eiso; Everson, Michael. "Proposal to encode three uppercase Latin letters used in early Pinyin" (PDF).
  3. ^ a b Michael Everson, 2012-02-08, Proposal for the addition of five Latin characters to the UCS, UUG, DK.
  4. ^ "Proposed New Characters: The Pipeline".
  5. ^ a b c "Presentation of the "African Reference Alphabet" (in 4 images) from the Niamey 1978 meeting". Bisharat!.
  6. ^ Joshua M Jensen, Karl Pentzlin, 2012-02-08, Proposal to encode a Latin Capital Letter L with Belt, UUG, DK.
  7. ^ a b c http://www.pentzlin.com/Proposal-North-American-Indigenous-Letters-Draft2.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ http://www.pentzlin.com/EPA_Proposal_V5.pdf[bare URL PDF]
This page was last edited on 10 February 2024, at 04:05
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