Tilde
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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).