Right Half Ring

From FrathWiki
Revision as of 06:13, 16 February 2015 by Qwynegold (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigationJump to search

The right half ring is based on the Greek spiritus lenis (᾿).[1]

Right Half Ring in Unicode

Characters with Right Half Ring
ʾ ◌͗
U+02BE U+0357 U+1E9A
Modifier Letter Right Half Ring Combining Right Half Ring Above Latin Small Letter A With Right Half Ring
Note: May be confused with Modifier Letter Prime, ʹ (U+02B9); Modifier Letter Turned Comma, ʻ (U+02BB); Modifier Letter Apostrophe, ʼ (U+02BC); Modifier Letter Reversed Comma, ʽ (U+02BD); Modifier Letter Left Half Ring, ʿ (U+02BF); Combining Turned Comma Above, ◌̒ (U+0312), Combining Comma Above, ◌̓ (U+0313); Combining Reversed Comma Above, ◌̔ (U+0314); Combining Comma Above Right, ◌̕ (U+0315); Combining Left Half Ring Above, ◌͑ (U+0351); Left Single Quotation Mark, ‘ (U+2018); Right Single Quotation Mark, ’ (U+2019); Single High-Reversed-9 Quotation Mark, ‛ (U+201B); Prime, ′ (U+2032); Reversed Prime, ‵ (U+2035); or Superscript Right Parenthesis, ⁾ (U+207E).

Right Half Ring in Natlangs

Uses of Right Half Ring
Usage Language Letters Notes
Other Ancient Egyptian I͗i͗ /j/ or a vowel[2] The pronunciation of Ancient Egyptian changed much during the millennia it was spoken, and the exact pronunciation can't be known for sure,[3] therefore the phonemic representation here might not be entirely accurate. The reason I͗i͗ is used is because it was thought at one time that both /j/ and /ʔ/ could have been possible sound values,[4] and /ʔ/ is sometimes written as ʾ.[5] Note that I͗i͗ are not precomposed characters.

Right Half Ring in Phonetic Transcriptions

Uses of Right Half Ring
Use Transcription system Notes

See Also

References