Tilde
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Tilde in Unicode
~ | ˜ | ◌̃ | Ã | ã | Ẫ | ẫ | Ẵ | ẵ | Ẽ | ẽ | Ễ | ễ |
U+007E | U+02DC | U+0303 | U+00C3 | U+00E3 | U+1EAA | U+1EAB | U+1EB4 | U+1EB5 | U+1EBC | U+1EBD | U+1EC4 | U+1EC5 |
Tilde | Small Tilde | Combining Tilde | Latin Capital Letter A With Tilde | Latin Small Letter A With Tilde | Latin Capital Letter A With Circumflex And Tilde | Latin Small Letter A With Circumflex And Tilde | Latin Capital Letter A With Breve And Tilde | Latin Small Letter A With Breve And Tilde | Latin Capital Letter E With Tilde | Latin Small Letter E With Tilde | Latin Capital Letter E With Circumflex And Tilde | Latin Small Letter E With Circumflex And Tilde |
Note: May be confused with swung dash, ⁓ (U+2053). | ||||||||||||
Ĩ | ĩ | Ñ | ñ | Õ | õ | Ȭ | ȭ | Ṍ | ṍ | Ṏ | ṏ | Ỗ |
U+0128 | U+0129 | U+00D1 | U+00F1 | U+00D5 | U+00F5 | U+022C | U+022D | U+1E4C | U+1E4D | U+1E4E | U+1E4F | U+1ED6 |
Latin Capital Letter I With Tilde | Latin Small Letter I With Tilde | Latin Capital Letter N With Tilde | Latin Small Letter N With Tilde | Latin Capital Letter O With Tilde | Latin Small Letter O With Tilde | Latin Capital Letter O With Tilde And Macron | Latin Small Letter O With Tilde And Macron | Latin Capital Letter O With Tilde And Acute | Latin Small Letter O With Tilde And Acute | Latin Capital Letter O With Tilde And Diaeresis | Latin Small Letter O With Tilde And Diaeresis | Latin Capital Letter O With Circumflex And Tilde |
ỗ | Ỡ | ỡ | Ũ | ũ | Ṹ | ṹ | Ữ | ữ | Ṽ | ṽ | Ỹ | ỹ |
U+1ED7 | U+1EE0 | U+1EE1 | U+0168 | U+0169 | U+1E78 | U+1E79 | U+1EEE | U+1EEF | U+1E7C | U+1E7D | U+1EF8 | U+1EF9 |
Latin Small Letter O With Circumflex And Tilde | Latin Capital Letter O With Horn And Tilde | Latin Small Letter O With Horn And Tilde | Latin Capital Letter U With Tilde | Latin Small Letter U With Tilde | Latin Capital Letter U With Tilde And Acute | Latin Small Letter U With Tilde And Acute | Latin Capital Letter U With Horn And Tilde | Latin Small Letter U With Horn And Tilde | Latin Capital Letter V With Tilde | Latin Small Letter V With Tilde | Latin Capital Letter Y With Tilde | Latin Small Letter Y With Tilde |
Tilde in Natlangs
Use | Language | Letters | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Glottalized vowel | Vietnamese | Ãã /aˀː˧˥/, Ẵẵ /aˀ˧˥/, Ẫẫ /əˀ˧˥/, Ẽẽ /ɛˀ˧˥/, Ễễ /eˀ˧˥/, Ĩĩ /iˀ˧˥/, Õõ /ɔˀ˧˥/, Ỗỗ /oˀ˧˥/, Ỡỡ /əˀː˧˥/, Ũũ /uˀ˧˥/, Ữữ /ɨˀ˧˥/, Ỹỹ /iˀ˧˥/ | The tilde stands for mid rising tone interrupted by a glottal stop.[1] There are many exceptions to the phonemic values of these letters though.[2] |
Unrounded vowel | Estonian | Õõ /ɤ/ | |
Other | ISO 15919 romanization of Indic scripts | Ññ | Ññ is used for transcribing the Indic diacritic anusvāra before palatal consonants.[3] |
Livonian | Õõ /ɨ/, Ȭȭ /ɨː/ |
The tilde is a variable-use diacritic.
Unicode recognizes the following precomposed tilde-appended letters: ã ẽ ĩ ɫ ñ õ ũ ṽ ỹ
The two most common uses originate from the Iberian peninsula:
- Nasalization
- Portuguese marks its nasal vowels by ã õ (from older aⁿ oⁿ).
- Inspired by this, the IPA marks nasalization of any segment with a superscript tilde, as in [ã].
- Several other nat- and conlangs follow suit.
- Palatalization
- Spanish ñ (from older nn) represents a palatal nasal /ɲ/.
- This has also been adpoted for Basque.
Other uses include:
- Emphasis
- Older IPA standards use a middle tilde for velarization or pharyngealization. This still survives in ɫ.
- Transcription of Quenya uses ñ to represent a velar nasal /ŋ/.
- Derounding: Estonian uses õ to represent a close-mid back unrounded vowel /ɤ/.
- Tone: Falling tone in ancient Greek is sometimes marked with a tilde (the usual diacritic is circumflex).
See Also
References
- ^ Vietnamese tones at Wikipedia.
- ^ Vietnamese orthography at Wikipedia.
- ^ ISO 15919 at Wikipedia.