Home  

Random  

Nearby  



Log in  



Settings  



Donate  



About Wikipedia  

Disclaimers  



Wikipedia





Phonetic Symbol Guide





Article  

Talk  



Language  

Watch  

Edit  





The Phonetic Symbol Guide is a book by Geoffrey Pullum and William Ladusaw that explains the histories and uses of the symbols of various phonetic transcription conventions. It was published in 1986, with a second edition in 1996, by the University of Chicago Press. Symbols include letters and diacritics of the International Phonetic Alphabet and Americanist phonetic notation, though not of the Uralic Phonetic Alphabet. The Guide was consulted by the International Phonetic Association when they established names and numerical codes for the International Phonetic Alphabet[1] and was the basis for the characters of the TIPA set of phonetic fonts.

List of symbols

edit
 
The TIPA character set covers many of the symbols in the Phonetic Symbol Guide, including some that are not supported by Unicode

The symbols included in the 2nd edition of the Guide are as follows. A number were adopted into Unicode 14 and 15 and have been available in SIL fonts since February 2023. Those not found in Unicode are marked with an asterisk.

a ȧ ä ɐ ɑ α ɒ ɒ̇ ɒ̈ æ æ̇ æ̈ A 4 *[small cap ] Æ *[small cap ] ʌ *[small cap Δ ]
b ƀ ь ъ ɓ ʙ β
c ć ȼ č ç ƈ ɕ ʗ 𝼏 C
d đ 𝼥 ɗ ɖ ȸ ʣ ʤ ð δ D
e ë ę ə ɚ ɘ ᴇ̈ E ɛ ɛ̇ ʚ ɜ ɝ ɞ
f ƒ
ɡ ǥ ɠ g ɢ ʛ G ɣ γ *[palatal-hook γ] *[retroflex-hook γ] ɤ *(and its allograph  )
h ƕ ħ ɦ *[right-tail ɦ] ɧ ɥ ʮ ʯ ʜ H
i ï ı ɨ ɪ ɪ̈ I ι ɿ ʅ
j *[hook-top j] ɉ ʝ ǰ ɟ ʄ
k ƙ ʞ 𝼐
l ɫ ƚ ɬ ɭ ɮ *(and its allograph  ) ʟ L *[reversed ʟ] λ ƛ
m ɱ *[h-m ligature] ɯ ɰ M
n ń *[left-arm n] π ƞ ñ ɲ ŋ η ɳ ɴ N
o ȯ ö ǫ ƍ σ O ʘ ɵ θ ø 0︀ (and its variant ) ɸ œ ɶ 8
ɔ ɔ̇ ɔ̈ *[turned ] ω ω̇ ω̈ *[turned ω] ɷ ꭥ̇ ꭥ̈ ꭥ̶
p ƥ *[straight allograph of ƍ ] P ρ ƿ þ
q ʠ ȹ
r ɾ ɼ ɽ ɹ ɻ ɺ ʀ R ʁ
s S š ʂ ʃ 𝼋 ƪ ʆ 𝼌
t ŧ 𝼪 ƫ ʈ ƭ ʇ 𝼍 ʦ ʧ
u ü ʉ *[half-barred u] ʊ ᴜ̇ *[small cap ] U
v ʋ
w ◌̫ ʍ
x X χ
y ÿ ʎ ʏ
z ȥ ž ʑ ʐ ƻ ʒ ǯ ƺ ʓ ƹ
ʔ ? 7 ʡ ʖ ƾ 𝼎 ʕ 9 ʢ
ǃ ǀ / ǂ ǁ # & *
Chao tone letters: ˩ ˨ ˧ ˦ ˥ etc.
IPA tone diacritics: ◌́ ◌̄ ◌̀ ◌̌ ◌̂ ◌᷉ etc.
◌̄ ˉ ˗ ◌̠ ˍ + ◌̟ ◌̽ ˭
◌̪ ◌̺ ◌̻ ◌̝ ˔ ◌̞ ˕ ◌꭪ ◌꭫
ˈ ˌ ◌̩ ◌̚
˂ ˃ ◌͕ ⃖ (superscript )
◌̇ . ˑ ◌̣ ◌̈ ◌̤ ː
ʼ ʽ ʻ ,
◌̊ ◌̥ ◌̜ ˒ ◌̹
◌̃ ◌̴ ◌̰ ◌̼
◌́ ˊ ◌̀ ˋ ◌̂ ◌̭ ◌̌ ◌̬
◌̨ ◌̧ ◌̡ ◌˞ ◌̢
◌̆ ◌̑ ◌̯ ◌͡◌ ◌͜◌

Non-trivial Unicode support

edit

Not all Unicode support is direct. Some typewriter substitutions made by overstriking a Latin letter with a virgule require composite encoding:

Similarly ⟨ꭥ̶⟩, an unused proposal to replace Americanist ⟨ꭥ̇⟩.

The 'baby gamma' variant of the vowel letter ⟨ɤ⟩ is available as a character variant in fonts such as Gentium and Andika.

Several other symbols are graphic variants of Unicode characters:

A couple are more distinct graphically, but without a corresponding semantic distinction:

Rare symbols

edit

The following are not supported by Unicode as of version 15.[2]

Some of the symbols are idiosyncratic proposals by well-known scholars that never caught on:

 
Ef, thorn, and right-tail hooktop h

A couple symbols were mentioned in the 1949 Principles of the International Phonetic Association as recent suggestions for further improvement and were never adopted:

 
The h-m ligature for [m̥]

The majority of the non-Unicode symbols were proposed by George Trager to improve the Bloch & Trager system of vowel transcription and other conventions of Americanist notation, but were never adopted:

 
The small-cap A-O ligature for [ɶ]
 
The proposed letter for a dental nasal

A couple have seen use in Slavic sources:

References

edit
  1. ^ Handbook of the International Phonetic Association, 1999, p. 31, 161.
  • ^ Updated from Phonetic Symbol Guide at ScriptSource (⟨⟩ was added to Unicode 11 as U+A7B9); additions in U14 and U15 are listed above.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Phonetic_Symbol_Guide&oldid=1223281067"
     



    Last edited on 11 May 2024, at 01:34  





    Languages

     


    Français
     

    Wikipedia


    This page was last edited on 11 May 2024, at 01:34 (UTC).

    Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Terms of Use

    Desktop