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== Caron in Unicode ==
== Caron in Unicode ==
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Precomposed Letters with Caron
|+ Characters with Caron
| style="font-size:180%" | ˇ || style="font-size:180%" | ◌̌ || style="font-size:180%" | Ǎ || style="font-size:180%" | ǎ || style="font-size:180%" | Č || style="font-size:180%" | č || style="font-size:180%" | Ď || style="font-size:180%" | ď || style="font-size:180%" | DŽ || style="font-size:180%" | Dž || style="font-size:180%" | dž || style="font-size:180%" | Ě || style="font-size:180%" | ě
| style="font-size:180%" | ˇ || style="font-size:180%" | ◌̌ || style="font-size:180%" | Ǎ || style="font-size:180%" | ǎ || style="font-size:180%" | Č || style="font-size:180%" | č || style="font-size:180%" | Ď || style="font-size:180%" | ď || style="font-size:180%" | DŽ || style="font-size:180%" | Dž || style="font-size:180%" | dž || style="font-size:180%" | Ě || style="font-size:180%" | ě
|-
|-
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! Letters
! Letters
! Notes
! Notes
|-
| Alphabet extension
| [[Wikipedia:Pashto|Pashto]] (Yaqubi romanization)
| Čč /tʃ/, Ěě /ə/, Šš /ʃ/, Š̱š̱ /ʂ/, Žž /ʒ/, Ẕ̌ẕ̌ /ʐ/
| Cc, Ee, Ss, S̱s̱, Zz, Ẕẕ without caron stand for /ts, e, s, s, z, z/ respectively.<ref name=pashto>[https://geonames.nga.mil/gns/html/Romanization/Afghan_Romanization_System_Approved_from_27th_BGN_PCGN_Conference.pdf BGN/PCGN National Romanization System for Afghanistan] (PDF). See also [[Wikipedia:Pashto_phonology|Pashto phonology]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
|-
|-
| Change of [[Wikipedia:Manner_of_articulation|manner of articulation]]
| Change of [[Wikipedia:Manner_of_articulation|manner of articulation]]
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| Řř /r̝/
| Řř /r̝/
| This is a raised non-sonorant trill. Unaccented Rr stands for /r/.<ref name=czech_consonants>[[Wikipedia:Czech_language#Consonants|Czech language, Consonants]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
| This is a raised non-sonorant trill. Unaccented Rr stands for /r/.<ref name=czech_consonants>[[Wikipedia:Czech_language#Consonants|Czech language, Consonants]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
|-
| Disambiguation in transliteration
| [[Wikipedia:Amharic|Amharic]] (BGN/PCGN 1967 transliteration)
| Šš /s/
| The [[Wikipedia:Geʽez_script|Geʽez]] script has two types of characters that are both pronounced /s/ in Amharic due to sound mergers. These may be transliterated with Ss and Šš. The caron may also be dropped though.<ref name=amharic>[https://geonames.nga.mil/gns/html/Romanization/ROMANIZATION%20OF%20AMHARIC.pdf Romanization of Amharic] (PDF).</ref>
|-
| rowspan=2 | Falling-rising (dipping) [[Wikipedia:Tone_(linguistics)|tone]]
| [[Wikipedia:Fon_language|Fon]]
| Ǎǎ [a᷉], Ěě [e᷉], Ɛ̌ɛ̌ [ɛ᷉], Ǐǐ [i᷉], Ǒǒ [o᷉], Ɔ̌ɔ̌ [ɔ᷉], Ǔǔ [u᷉]
| The falling-rising tone is not phonemic in Fon, but it is still marked with a caron. Tones are however not always marked at all.<ref name=fon>[[Wikipedia:Fon_language#Tone_marking|Fon language, Tone marking]] at Wikipedia. See also [[Wikipedia:Fon_language#Tone|Fon language, Tone]] for a short overview of the tonal system of Fon.</ref> Note that Ɛ̌ɛ̌ and Ɔ̌ɔ̌ are not precomposed characters.
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Mandarin_Chinese|Mandarin]] ([[Wikipedia:Pinyin|Pinyin]] romanization)
| Ǎǎ /a˨˩˦/, Ěě /ə˨˩˦/, Ǐǐ /i˨˩˦/, Ǒǒ /ə˨˩˦/, Ǔǔ /u˨˩˦/, Ǚǚ /y˨˩˦/
| Pinyin was created in the 1950s, and its tone marks were based on the [[Wikipedia:Bopomofo|Bopomofo]] phonetic notation.<ref name=pinyin>[[Wikipedia:Pinyin#History_after_1949|Pinyin, History after 1949]] at Wikipedia.</ref> Note that these tone values are based on the Beijing dialect.<ref name=beijing_dialect>[[Wikipedia:Mandarin_Chinese#Tones|Mandarin Chinese, Tones]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
|-
|-
| rowspan=2 | [[Wikipedia:Palatal_consonant|Palatal]] phoneme
| rowspan=2 | [[Wikipedia:Palatal_consonant|Palatal]] phoneme
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| In Slovak handwriting ď, ľ and ť have an actual caron instead of an apostrophe.<ref name=slovak>[[Wikipedia:Slovak_language#Orthography|Slovak language, Orthography]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
| In Slovak handwriting ď, ľ and ť have an actual caron instead of an apostrophe.<ref name=slovak>[[Wikipedia:Slovak_language#Orthography|Slovak language, Orthography]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
|-
|-
| rowspan=3 | [[Wikipedia:Postalveolar_consonant|Postalveolar consonant]]
| rowspan=9 | [[Wikipedia:Postalveolar_consonant|Postalveolar consonant]]
| [[Wikipedia:Akkadian_language|Akkadian]] (DMG-umschrift transliteration), [[Wikipedia:Egyptian_language|Ancient Egyptian]] ([[Wikipedia:Transliteration_of_Ancient_Egyptian#Uniliteral_signs|traditional transliteration]])
| Šš /ʃ/
| Because Akkadian<ref name=akkadian_phonetics>[[Wikipedia:Akkadian_language#Phonetics_and_phonology|Akkadian language, Phonetics and phonology]] at Wikipedia.</ref> and Ancient Egyptian<ref name=egyptian_phonetics>[[Wikipedia:Egyptian_language#Phonology|Egyptian language, Phonology]] at Wikipedia.</ref> are extinct languages, the exact pronunciation can't be known for sure; so the phonemic representation here might not be entirely accurate.
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Arabic_language|Arabic]] ([[Wikipedia:DIN_31635|DIN 31635]] romanization, [[Wikipedia:ISO_233#ISO/R_233:1961|ISO/R 233]] romanization)
| Čč /t͡ʃ/, Ǧǧ /d͡ʒ~ʒ~ɡ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ~zˤ/
| Čč and Žž represent the letters چ and ز which are not Arabic letters, but can be used in Arabic texts for transcribing sounds found in other languages.<ref name=che>[[Wikipedia:Che_(Persian_letter)|Che (Persian letter)]] at Wikipedia.</ref><ref name=zhe>[[Wikipedia:Že|Že]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Arabic_language|Arabic]] ([[Wikipedia:ISO_233|ISO 233]] romanization)
| Ǧǧ /d͡ʒ~ʒ~ɡ/, Šš /ʃ/
|
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Arabic_language|Arabic]] ([[Wikipedia:Hans_Wehr_transliteration|Hans Wehr]] romanization)
| ǧ /d͡ʒ~ʒ~ɡ/, š /ʃ/, ž /ʒ~zˤ/
| ǧ was replaced by j in the fourth edition of this romanization scheme.<ref name=hans_wehr>[[Wikipedia:Hans_Wehr_transliteration|Hans Wehr transliteration]] at Wikipedia.</ref> ž represents the letter ز which is not an Arabic letter, but can be used in Arabic texts for transcribing sounds found in other languages.<ref name=zhe/>  Hans Wehr romanization does not include capital letters.<ref name=hans_wehr/>
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Czech_language|Czech]], [[Wikipedia:Latgalian_language|Latgalian]], [[Wikipedia:Latvian_language|Latvian]]
| [[Wikipedia:Czech_language|Czech]], [[Wikipedia:Latgalian_language|Latgalian]], [[Wikipedia:Latvian_language|Latvian]]
| Čč /tʃ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/
| Čč /tʃ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/
| Unaccented Cc stands for /ts/ in Czech, Latvian and Latgalian.
| Unaccented Cc stands for /ts/ in Czech, Latvian and Latgalian.
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Dari|Darī]] (Yaqubi romanization)
| Čč /tʃ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/
| Unaccented Ss, Zz stand for /s, z/ respectively.<ref name=dari>[https://geonames.nga.mil/gns/html/Romanization/Afghan_Romanization_System_Approved_from_27th_BGN_PCGN_Conference.pdf BGN/PCGN National Romanization System for Afghanistan] (PDF). See also [[Wikipedia:Dari#Phonology|Dari]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
|-
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Livonian_language|Livonian]]
| [[Wikipedia:Livonian_language|Livonian]]
| Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/
| Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/
|
|
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Northern_Sami|North Sami]] (1979 orthography)
| Čč {{IPA|/tʃ/}}, Šš {{IPA|/ʃ/}}, Žž {{IPA|/dʒ/}}
| Unaccented Cc stands for {{IPA|/ts/}}, and unaccented Zz for {{IPA|/dz/}}.
|-
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Slovak_language|Slovak]]
| [[Wikipedia:Slovak_language|Slovak]]
| Čč /tʃ/, DŽdž /dʒ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/
| Čč /tʃ/, DŽdž /dʒ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/
|
|
|-
| rowspan=2 | [[Wikipedia:Retroflex_consonant|Retroflex consonant]]
| [[Wikipedia:Adyghe_language|Adyghe]] (BGN/PCGN 2012 romanization)
| Čč /ʈʂ/
| There is no simple Cc in the BGN/PCGN 2012 romanization, but there is a Ch ch which represents /tʃ/.<ref name=adyghe>[https://geonames.nga.mil/gns/html/Romanization/ROMANIZATION%20OF%20ADYGHE.pdf Romanization of Adyghe] (PDF). See also [[Wikipedia:Adyghe_language#Alphabet|Adyghe language, Alphabet]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Serbian_language|Serbian]]
| Čč /ʈʂ/, DŽ Dž dž /ɖʐ/, Šš /ʂ/, Žž /ʐ/
| These sounds are often transcribed as postalveolar /tʃ, dʒ, ʃ, ʒ/.<ref name=serbian>[[Wikipedia:Gaj's_Latin_alphabet#Letters|Gaj's Latin Alphabet, Letters]] at Wikipedia.</ref> DŽ is only used in all-caps text, and is consider the capital letter. Dž is used when only the first letter of a word is capitalized, and it is referred to as ''titlecase''.<ref name=titlecase>[[Wikipedia:Gaj's_Latin_alphabet#Digraphs|Gaj's Latin alphabet, Digraphs]] at Wikipedia.</ref>
|-
|-
| [[Wikipedia:Uvular_consonant|Uvular consonant]]
| [[Wikipedia:Uvular_consonant|Uvular consonant]]
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| Ǧǧ /ɢ/, Ǧv ǧv /ɢʷ/, X̌x̌ /χ/, X̌v x̌v /χʷ/
| Ǧǧ /ɢ/, Ǧv ǧv /ɢʷ/, X̌x̌ /χ/, X̌v x̌v /χʷ/
| Note that X̌x̌ is not a precomposed letter.
| Note that X̌x̌ is not a precomposed letter.
|}
== Caron in Phonetic Transcription ==
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Uses of caron
! Use
! Transcription system
! Notes
|-
| Rising [[Wikipedia:Tone_(linguistics)|tone]]
| [[IPA|International Phonetic Alphabet]] (IPA)
| Used on top of vowels (or syllabic consonants).
|}
|}


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*[[Natlang_Uses_of_Diacritics_in_the_Latin_Alphabet|Natlang Uses of Diacritics in the Latin Alphabet]]
*[[Natlang_Uses_of_Diacritics_in_the_Latin_Alphabet|Natlang Uses of Diacritics in the Latin Alphabet]]
*[[Breve]]
*[[Breve]]
*[http://transliteration.eki.ee/pdf/Arabic_2.2.pdf Transliteration of Arabic] (Pedersen, Thomas. 2008.) has a concise list of comparisons between DIN 31635, ISO 233, ISO/R 233, UNGEGN, ALA-LC, and The Encyclopedia of Islam romanizations of Arabic.


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 06:03, 13 July 2021

Caron is also known as háček or haček. It originated from dot above in Czech orthography.[1] Note that the caron is easily confused with the similar looking breve ˘, especially in small font sizes.

Caron in Unicode

Characters with Caron
ˇ ◌̌ Ǎ ǎ Č č Ď ď DŽ Dž dž Ě ě
U+02C7 U+030C U+01CD U+01CD U+010C U+010D U+010E U+010F U+01C4 U+01C5 U+01C6 U+011A U+011B
Caron Combining Caron Latin Letter Capital A With Caron Latin Letter Small A With Caron Latin Capital Letter C With Caron Latin Small Letter C With Caron Latin Capital Letter D With Caron Latin Small Letter D With Caron Latin Capital Letter Dz With Caron Latin Capital Letter D With Small Letter Z With Caron Latin Small Letter Dz With Caron Latin Capital Letter E With Caron Latin Small Letter E With Caron
Note: May be confused with Modifier Letter Down Arrowhead, ˅ (U+02C5). Note: The caron looks actually like an apostrophe placed to the right of the ascender of the d.
Ǧ ǧ Ȟ ȟ Ǐ ǐ ǰ Ǩ ǩ Ľ ľ Ň ň
U+01E6 U+01E7 U+021E U+021F U+01CF U+01D0 U+01F0 ​ U+01E8 U+01E9 U+013D U+013E U+0147 U+0148
Latin Capital Letter G With Caron Latin Small Letter G With Caron Latin Capital Letter H With Caron Latin Small Letter H With Caron Latin Capital Letter I With Caron Latin Small Letter I With Caron Latin Small Letter J With Caron Latin Capital Letter K With Caron Latin Small Letter K With Caron Latin Capital Letter L With Caron Latin Small Letter L With Caron Latin Capital Letter N With Caron Latin Small Letter N With Caron
Note: The caron looks actually like an apostrophe placed to the right of the ascender of the Ll.
Ǒ ǒ Ř ř Š š Ť ť Ǔ ǔ Ǚ
U+01D1 U+01D2 U+0158 U+0159 U+0160 U+0161 U+1E66 U+1E67 U+0164 U+0165 U+01D3 U+01D4 U+01D9
Latin Capital Letter O With Caron Latin Small Letter O With Caron Latin Capital Letter R With Caron Latin Small Letter R With Caron Latin Capital Letter S With Caron Latin Small Letter S With Caron Latin Capital Letter S With Caron And Dot Above Latin Small Letter S With Caron And Dot Above Latin Capital Letter T With Caron Latin Small Letter T With Caron Latin Capital Letter U With Caron Latin Small Letter U With Caron Latin Capital Letter U With Diaeresis And Caron
Note: The caron looks actually like an apostrophe placed to the right of the ascender of the t.
ǚ Ž ž Ǯ ǯ
U+01DA U+017D U+017E U+01EE U+01EF
Latin Small Letter U With Diaeresis And Caron Latin Capital Letter Z With Caron Latin Small Letter Z With Caron Latin Capital Letter Ezh With Caron Latin Small Letter Ezh With Caron

Caron in Natlangs

Uses of Caron
Usage Language Letters Notes
Alphabet extension Pashto (Yaqubi romanization) Čč /tʃ/, Ěě /ə/, Šš /ʃ/, Š̱š̱ /ʂ/, Žž /ʒ/, Ẕ̌ẕ̌ /ʐ/ Cc, Ee, Ss, S̱s̱, Zz, Ẕẕ without caron stand for /ts, e, s, s, z, z/ respectively.[2]
Change of manner of articulation Czech Řř /r̝/ This is a raised non-sonorant trill. Unaccented Rr stands for /r/.[3]
Disambiguation in transliteration Amharic (BGN/PCGN 1967 transliteration) Šš /s/ The Geʽez script has two types of characters that are both pronounced /s/ in Amharic due to sound mergers. These may be transliterated with Ss and Šš. The caron may also be dropped though.[4]
Falling-rising (dipping) tone Fon Ǎǎ [a᷉], Ěě [e᷉], Ɛ̌ɛ̌ [ɛ᷉], Ǐǐ [i᷉], Ǒǒ [o᷉], Ɔ̌ɔ̌ [ɔ᷉], Ǔǔ [u᷉] The falling-rising tone is not phonemic in Fon, but it is still marked with a caron. Tones are however not always marked at all.[5] Note that Ɛ̌ɛ̌ and Ɔ̌ɔ̌ are not precomposed characters.
Mandarin (Pinyin romanization) Ǎǎ /a˨˩˦/, Ěě /ə˨˩˦/, Ǐǐ /i˨˩˦/, Ǒǒ /ə˨˩˦/, Ǔǔ /u˨˩˦/, Ǚǚ /y˨˩˦/ Pinyin was created in the 1950s, and its tone marks were based on the Bopomofo phonetic notation.[6] Note that these tone values are based on the Beijing dialect.[7]
Palatal phoneme Czech Ďď /ɟ/, Ěě /(j)ɛ/, Ňň /ɲ/, Ťť /c/ Ěě stands for an /ɛ/ that makes a previous Dd, Nn, Tt be /ɟ, ɲ, c/, a previous Bb, Ff, Pp, Vv be /bj, fj, pj, vj/, and a previous Mm /mɲ/. This letter is not found in other positions.[8]
Slovak Ďď /ɟ/, Ľľ /ʎ/, Ňň /ɲ/, Ťť /c/ In Slovak handwriting ď, ľ and ť have an actual caron instead of an apostrophe.[9]
Postalveolar consonant Akkadian (DMG-umschrift transliteration), Ancient Egyptian (traditional transliteration) Šš /ʃ/ Because Akkadian[10] and Ancient Egyptian[11] are extinct languages, the exact pronunciation can't be known for sure; so the phonemic representation here might not be entirely accurate.
Arabic (DIN 31635 romanization, ISO/R 233 romanization) Čč /t͡ʃ/, Ǧǧ /d͡ʒ~ʒ~ɡ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ~zˤ/ Čč and Žž represent the letters چ and ز which are not Arabic letters, but can be used in Arabic texts for transcribing sounds found in other languages.[12][13]
Arabic (ISO 233 romanization) Ǧǧ /d͡ʒ~ʒ~ɡ/, Šš /ʃ/
Arabic (Hans Wehr romanization) ǧ /d͡ʒ~ʒ~ɡ/, š /ʃ/, ž /ʒ~zˤ/ ǧ was replaced by j in the fourth edition of this romanization scheme.[14] ž represents the letter ز which is not an Arabic letter, but can be used in Arabic texts for transcribing sounds found in other languages.[13] Hans Wehr romanization does not include capital letters.[14]
Czech, Latgalian, Latvian Čč /tʃ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/ Unaccented Cc stands for /ts/ in Czech, Latvian and Latgalian.
Darī (Yaqubi romanization) Čč /tʃ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/ Unaccented Ss, Zz stand for /s, z/ respectively.[15]
Livonian Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/
North Sami (1979 orthography) Čč /tʃ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /dʒ/ Unaccented Cc stands for /ts/, and unaccented Zz for /dz/.
Slovak Čč /tʃ/, DŽdž /dʒ/, Šš /ʃ/, Žž /ʒ/
Retroflex consonant Adyghe (BGN/PCGN 2012 romanization) Čč /ʈʂ/ There is no simple Cc in the BGN/PCGN 2012 romanization, but there is a Ch ch which represents /tʃ/.[16]
Serbian Čč /ʈʂ/, DŽ Dž dž /ɖʐ/, Šš /ʂ/, Žž /ʐ/ These sounds are often transcribed as postalveolar /tʃ, dʒ, ʃ, ʒ/.[17] DŽ is only used in all-caps text, and is consider the capital letter. Dž is used when only the first letter of a word is capitalized, and it is referred to as titlecase.[18]
Uvular consonant Heiltsuk-Oowekyala (Heiltsuk dialect, official orthography and Rath's orthography) Ǧǧ /ɢ/, Ǧv ǧv /ɢʷ/, X̌x̌ /χ/, X̌v x̌v /χʷ/ Note that X̌x̌ is not a precomposed letter.

Caron in Phonetic Transcription

Uses of caron
Use Transcription system Notes
Rising tone International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) Used on top of vowels (or syllabic consonants).

See Also

References