Natlang Uses of Ogonek: Difference between revisions
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! Notes | ! Notes | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | | Nasalized vowel | ||
| | | [[Wikipedia:Polish_language|Polish]] | ||
| | | Ąą /ɔ̃/, Ęę /ɛ̃/ | ||
| | | Ąą represents a mid open vowel instead of a low vowel because of mergers.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_phonology#Historical_development] | ||
|} | |} | ||
== See Also == | |||
*[[Natlang_Uses_of_Diacritics_in_the_Latin_Alphabet|Natlang Uses of Diacritics in the Latin Alphabet]] | |||
[[Category:Natscripts]] | [[Category:Natscripts]] |
Revision as of 07:20, 30 January 2013
In European languages the ogonek is attached to the right side of Aa, Ee and u, but in Native American languages it is supposed to be placed directly under the letter if technically possible.[1] There are no separate Unicode poins for these variants. Note that the ogonek may be confused with cedilla ¸.
Ogonek in Unicode
˛ | ◌̨ | Ą | ą | Ę | ę | Į | į | Ǫ | ǫ | Ǭ | ǭ | Ų |
U+02DB | U+0328 | U+0104 | U+0105 | U+0118 | U+0119 | U+012E | U+012F | U+01EA | U+01EB | U+01EC | U+01ED | U+0172 |
Ogonek | Combining Ogonek | Latin Capital Letter A With Ogonek | Latin Small Letter A With Ogonek | Latin Capital Letter E With Ogonek | Latin Small Letter E With Ogonek | Latin Capital Letter I With Ogonek | Latin Small Letter I With Ogonek | Latin Capital Letter O With Ogonek | Latin Small Letter O With Ogonek | Latin Capital Letter O With Ogonek And Macron | Latin Small Letter O With Ogonek And Macron | Latin Capital Letter U With Ogonek |
ų | ||||||||||||
U+0173 | ||||||||||||
Latin Small Letter U With Ogonek |
Natlang Examples
Usage | Language | Letters | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Nasalized vowel | Polish | Ąą /ɔ̃/, Ęę /ɛ̃/ | Ąą represents a mid open vowel instead of a low vowel because of mergers.[2] |