 | Close-mid front unrounded vowel: Encyclopedia - Close-mid front unrounded vowel
Close-mid front unrounded vowel
Close-mid front unrounded vowel - Close-mid front unrounded vowel
The close-mid front unrounded vowel is a type of vowel sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is e, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is e.
Close-mid front unrounded vowel - Features
- Its vowel height is close-mid, which means the tongue is positioned halfway between close vowel and a mid vowel.
- Its vowel backness is front, which means the tongue is positioned as far forward as possible in the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant.
- Its vowel roundedness is unrounded, which means that the lips are not rounded.
Close-mid front unrounded vowel - Occurs in
- Dutch: één [eɪ̯n], 'one'
- English: (AuE) bed [bed] and bared [beːd]; (NZE) bed [be̝d]
- In RP, this vowel occurs only as the first part of the diphthong [eɪ], as in late [leɪt], play [pleɪ].
- In CaE, this vowel may occur alone in words like bait during rapid speech.
- French: beauté [bote], 'beauty'
- German: Seele [ˈzeːlə], 'soul'
- Hungarian: hét [heːt], 'week, seven'
- Vietnamese: tê [tē], 'numb'
Close-mid front unrounded vowel - Mid front unrounded vowel
Many languages, such as Spanish, Japanese, Korean, and Turkish, have a mid front unrounded vowel, which to speakers is clearly distinct from both the close-mid and open-mid vowels. However, since no language is known to distinguish all three, there is no separate IPA symbol for the mid vowel, and [e] is generally used. If precision is desired, the lowering diacritic can be used: [e̞].
Note that just because a language has only one non-close, non-open front vowel, that doesn't mean it's a cardinal mid vowel. Igbo, for example, has a close-mid [e], whereas Bulgarian has a open-mid [ɛ]; in neither language does this contrast with another open/close-mid vowel.
Close-mid front unrounded vowel - Occurs in
- Albanian: keq [ke̞c], 'bad'
- English: in GA, the first part of the diphthong [e̞ɪ], as in late [le̞ɪt], play [ple̞ɪ].
- Greek: επέτρεψε [e̞ˈpe̞tɾe̞pse̞], 's/he allowed'
- Japanese: 笑み [e̞mi], 'smile'
- Romanian: fete ['fe̞.te̞], 'girls'
- Spanish: bebé [be̞ˈβ̞e̞], 'baby'
- Turkish: kel [ke̞l], 'bald'
Close-mid front unrounded vowel - Reference
- Roca, Iggy & Johnson, Wyn (1999). Course in Phonology, Blackwell Publishing.
Category: Vowels
Other related archivesAlbanian, AuE, Bulgarian, CaE, Dutch, English, French, GA, German, Greek, Hungarian, Igbo, International Phonetic Alphabet, Japanese, Korean, NZE, RP, Romanian, Spanish, Turkish, Vietnamese, Vowels, X-SAMPA, close vowel, close-mid, consonant, diphthong, front, languages, mid vowel, spoken, unrounded, vowel, vowel backness, vowel height, vowel roundedness
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Close-mid front unrounded vowel", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |