Natlang Uses of Double Acute Accent: Difference between revisions

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! Notes
! Notes
|-
|-
| Long front version of back vowel
| Long [[Wikipedia:Front_vowel|front]] version of [[Wikipedia:Back_vowel|back vowel]]
| [[Wikipedia:Hungarian_language|Hungarian]]
| [[Wikipedia:Hungarian_language|Hungarian]]
| Őő /øː/, Űű /yː/
| Őő /øː/, Űű /yː/
|  
|  
|}
|}
== See Also ==
*[[Natlang_Uses_of_Diacritics_in_the_Latin_Alphabet|Natlang Uses of Diacritics in the Latin Alphabet]]
*[[Natlang_Uses_of_Acute_Accent|Natlang Uses of Acute Accent]]


[[Category:Natscripts]]
[[Category:Natscripts]]

Revision as of 11:02, 30 January 2013

The double acute accent (also known as Hungarumlaut) originates from Hungarian orthography. Őő and Űű were introduced to the Hungarian alphabet in the 19th century to replace earlier Ö́ö́ and Ǘǘ.[1]

Double Acute Accent in Unicode

Precomposed Letters with Double Acute Accent
˝ ˶ ◌̋ Ő ő Ű ű
U+02DD U+02F6 U+030B U+0150 U+0151 U+0170 U+0171
Double Acute Accent Modifier Letter Middle Double Acute Accent ​ Combining Double Acute Accent Latin Capital Letter O With Double Acute Latin Small Letter O With Double Acute Latin Capital Letter U With Double Acute Latin Small Letter U With Double Acute
Note: May be confused with Modifier Letter Double Prime, ʺ (U+02BA); Modifier Letter Double Apostrophe, ˮ (U+02EE); Left Double Quotation Mark, “ (U+201C); Right Double Quotation Mark, ” (U+201D); or Double Prime, ″ (U+2033).

Natlang Examples

Uses of Double Acute Accent
Usage Language Letters Notes
Long front version of back vowel Hungarian Őő /øː/, Űű /yː/

See Also