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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Alphabet  





3 Spelling patterns  



3.1  Spelling-to-sound correspondences  







4 Diacritics  



4.1  Accentuation  



4.1.1  Acute and grave accents  





4.1.2  Circumflex  







4.2  Diaeresis  





4.3  Ce trencada (c-cedilla)  





4.4  Punt volat (middot)  





4.5  Hyphen  





4.6  Apostrophe  







5 Capitalization  





6 Punctuation  





7 Other conventions  





8 See also  





9 Notes  





10 References  





11 Bibliography  














Catalan orthography






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Catalan alphabet)

The Catalan and Valencian orthographies encompass the spelling and punctuation of standard Catalan (set by the IEC) and Valencian (set by the AVL). There are also several adapted variants to the peculiarities of local dialects of Insular Catalan (Alguerese and the Balearic subdialects).

History[edit]

The history of the Catalan and Valencian orthographies shows a singularity in regard to the other Romance languages. These have been mostly developed from Latin, adapting them to their own phonetic particularities. It had been a gradual and slow process through centuries until the creation of the Academies in the 18th century that fixed the orthography from their language dominant variety.[1]

In the case of Catalan and Valencian, the mediaeval orthography had a noticeable homogeneity. The Royal Chancellery set a unitary written model in several fields. Thus, Ramon Muntaner expressed in his Chronicle (1325–1328) that the Catalans are the largest group with a single language, since all the Romance-speaking regions had very divided languages like the difference that exists between Catalans and Aragonese.[2]

In the 16th century, just after the Golden Age, the split of Catalans started. With the isolation of the Royal Court and several political events, the unitary linguistic consciousness and the shared cultural tradition broke off. The production became more dialectal.

In the 19th century, the recovery of the unity emerged, beginning with the orthography. Institutions like the Acadèmia de Bones Lletres or the Floral Games were in the middle of several orthographic dilemmas.

The orthographic norms of Catalan were first defined officially in the First International Congress of the Catalan Language, held in Barcelona in October 1906. Subsequently, the Philological Section of the Institut d'Estudis Catalans (IEC, founded in 1911) published the Normes ortogràfiques in 1913 under the direction of Antoni Maria Alcover and Pompeu Fabra. Despite some opposition, the spelling system was adopted immediately and became widespread enough that, in 1932, Valencian writers and intellectuals gathered in Castelló to make a formal adoption of the so-called Normes de Castelló, a set of guidelines following Pompeu Fabra's Catalan language norms.[3]

In 1917, Fabra published an Orthographic Dictionary following the orthographic norms of the IEC. In 1931–1932 the Diccionari General de la Llengua Catalana (General Dictionary of the Catalan language) appeared.  In 1995, a new normative dictionary, the Dictionary of the Catalan Language of the Institute of Catalan Studies (DIEC), marked a new milestone in the orthographic fixation of the language, in addition to the incorporation of neologisms and modern uses of the language.

On the 24th October 2016, the IEC published a new orthography for Catalan, the Ortografia catalana, which outlined several modifications, including a reduced number of monosyllabic words that take an acuteorgrave diacritic for reasons of disambiguation.[4] Thus, the disyllabic word adéu is now generally spelled adeu; the monosyllabic words sec ("dry", pronounced /sɛk/inCentral Catalan) and séc ("fold, wrinkle", pronounced /sek/) are both written sec after the reform. Discretionary use of a diacritic is possible if the context is not sufficient for disambiguation.[4]

Alphabet[edit]

Like those of many other Romance languages, the Catalan and Valencian alphabet derives from the Latin alphabet and is largely based on the respective language's phonology.[5]

The Catalan and Valencian alphabet consists of the 26 letters of the ISO basic Latin alphabet:

Catalan and Valencian alphabet
Upper case A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Lower case a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z

The following letter-diacritic combinations are used, but they do not constitute distinct letters in the alphabet: À à, É é, È è, Í í, Ï ï, Ó ó, Ò ò, Ú ú, Ü ü and Ç ç (though the Catalan keyboard includes the letter Ç as a separate key).[6] K k and W w are used only in loanwords. Outside loanwords, the letters Q q and Y y appear only in the digraphs qu, and ny. However, Y was used until the official orthography was established in 1913, when it was replaced with I, except in the digraph ny and loanwords.[7] Some Catalan surnames conserve the letter y and the word-final digraph ch (pronounced /k/), e. g. Layret, Aymerich.

The following table shows the letters and their names in Standard Catalan (IEC) and Standard Valencian (AVL):

Letter Catalan Valencian
Name (IEC) Pronunciation Name (AVL) Pronunciation
Aa a /ˈa/ a /ˈa/
Bb be, be alta /ˈbe/, /ˈbe ˈaltə/ be, be alta /ˈbe/, /ˈbe ˈalta/
Cc ce /ˈse/ ce /ˈse/
Dd de /ˈde/ de /ˈde/
Ee e /ˈe/ e /ˈe/
Ff efa /ˈefə/ efe, ef /ˈefe/, /ˈef/
Gg ge /ˈʒe/ ge /ˈdʒe/
Hh hac /ˈak/ hac /ˈak/
Ii i, i llatina /ˈi/, /ˈi ʎəˈtinə/ i, i llatina /ˈi/, /ˈi ʎaˈtina/
Jj jota /ˈʒɔtə/ jota /ˈdʒota/
Kk ca /ˈka/ ca /ˈka/
Ll ela /ˈelə/ ele, el /ˈele/, /ˈel/
Mm ema /ˈemə/ eme, em /ˈeme/, /ˈem/
Nn ena /ˈenə/ ene, en /ˈene/, /ˈen/
Oo o /ˈo/ o /ˈo/
Pp pe /ˈpe/ pe /ˈpe/
Qq cu /ˈku/ cu /ˈku/
Rr erra /ˈɛrə/ erre, er /ˈere/, /ˈeɾ/
Ss essa /ˈesə/ esse, es /ˈese/, /ˈes/
Tt te /ˈte/ te /ˈte/
Uu u /ˈu/ u /ˈu/
Vv ve, ve baixa /ˈve/, /ˈbe ˈbaʃə/ ve, ve baixa /ˈve/, /ˈbe ˈbajʃa/
Ww ve doble /ˈve ˈdobːlə/, /ˈbe ˈdobːlə/ ve doble /ˈve ˈdoble/, /ˈbe ˈdoble/
Xx ics, xeix /ˈiks/, /ˈʃeʃ/ ics, xeix /ˈiks/, /ˈʃejʃ/
Yy i grega /ˈi ˈɡɾeɡə/ i grega /ˈi ˈɡɾeɡa/
Zz zeta /ˈzetə/ zeta /ˈzeta/

The names efa (/ˈefa/), ela (/ˈela/), ema (/ˈema/), ena (/ˈena/), erra (/ˈera/), and essa (/ˈesa/) are also used in certain speeches of Valencian.[8]

The names be alta ("high b") and ve baixa ("low v") are used by speakers who do not distinguish the phonemes /b/ and /v/. Speakers that do distinguish them use the simple names be and ve.[8]

Spelling patterns[edit]

Spelling-to-sound correspondences[edit]

Catalan is a pluricentric language; the pronunciation of some of the letters is different in Eastern Catalan (IEC) and Valencian (AVL). Apart from those variations, the pronunciation of most consonants is fairly straightforward and is similar to French, Occitan or Portuguese pronunciation. (The following list includes a quick pronunciation of letters in standard Catalan and Valencian, for an in-depth view see attached main article on top of this section).

Consonants
Spelling Catalan Valencian Example
b /b/[a] barra
c /k/, /s/[b] casa, cent
ç /s/ açò
d /d/[a] dama
f /f/ fusta
g /ɡ/,[a] /ʒ/,[b] /t͡ʃ/[c] /ɡ/,[a] /d͡ʒ/,[b] /t͡ʃ/[c] gana, gel, mig
h ham
j /ʒ/ /d͡ʒ/, /j/ jocs, ja
k /k/ kurd
l /l/ lira
m /m/ mal
n /n/[d] nas
p /p/ peu
q /k/ quart
r /r/,[e] /ɾ/, ∅ /r/,[e] /ɾ/ ram, mare, ser
s /s/, /z/ sac, casa
t /t/ tou
v /b/or/v/[f] /v/ vaca
w /w/, /b/or/v/[f] /w/, /v/ web, watt
x /ʃ//ks//ɡz/ /t͡ʃ//ʃ//ks//ɡz/ xiula, ix, fixar, èxits
y /j/,[g] /i/ yuppie, lady
z /z/ zona
 
Main digraphs and letter combinations
Spelling Catalan Valencian Example
gu /ɡw/, /ɡu/, /ɡ/[b] guant, agut, guia
ig[c] /t͡ʃ/, /it͡ʃ/ raig, desig
ix[c] /ʃ/, /iʃ/ /i̯ʃ/, /iʃ/ feix, reïx
ll /ʎ/ brolla
ŀl /lː/ coŀlegi
ny /ɲ/ senyal
qu /kw/, /k/[b] quan, perquè
rr /r/ garra
ss /s/ bossa
tg[b] /d͡ʒ/ fetge
tj viatjar
tl(l) /ʎː/ /lː/ guatl(l)a
tll /ʎ/ bitllet
ts /t͡s/ potser
tx /t͡ʃ/ cotxe
tz /d͡z/ /d͡z/, /z/ dotze, realitzar
Vowels
Spelling Catalan Valencian Example
a /a/, /ə/ /a/ mar, amar
à /a/ mà
e /ɛ/, /e/, /ə/ /ɛ/, /e/ set, anell, anelles
è /ɛ/, */ə/[h] /ɛ/, /e/ dèbit, què
é /e/ séc
i /i/, /i̯./[g], ∅ dia, feia, raig
í /i/ veí
ï /.i/ raïm, veïnat
o /ɔ/, /o/, /u/, /u̯./ /ɔ/, /o/ soc, molt, socors, oasi
ò /ɔ/ mòlt
ó /o/ dóna
u /u/, /u̯./[g], ∅ suc, creua, guia
ú /u/ ús
ü /.u/, /.w/ reüll, egües

Diacritics[edit]

Accentuation[edit]

Acute and grave accents[edit]

Catalan and Valencian also use the acute and grave accents to mark stress or vowel quality. An acute on ⟨é ó⟩ indicates that the vowel is stressed and close-mid (/e o/), while grave on ⟨è ò⟩ indicates that the vowel is stressed and open-mid ( ɔ/). Grave on ⟨à⟩ and acute on ⟨í ú⟩ simply indicate that the vowels are stressed. Thus, the acute is used on close or close-mid vowels, and the grave on open or open-mid vowels.[5] For example:

Standard rules governing the presence of accents are based on word endings and the position of the stressed syllable. In particular, accents are expected for:

This does not occur in words like parleu /pəɾˈlɛw/or/paɾˈlɛw/ ('you are speaking' plural), or parlem /pəɾˈlɛm/or/paɾˈlɛm/ ('we are speaking').
This does not occur in words like parla /ˈpaɾlə/or/ˈpaɾla/ ('he is speaking'), parles /ˈpaɾləs/or/ˈpaɾles/ ('you are speaking' singular), or parlen /ˈpaɾlən/or/ˈpaɾlen/ ('they are speaking').

Since there is no need to mark the stressed syllable of a monosyllabic word, most of them do not have an accent. Exceptions are those with a diacritical accent differentiating words that would otherwise be homographic. Example: es /əs/or/es/ ('it' impersonal) vs és /ˈes/ ('is'), te /tə/or/te/ ('you' clitic) vs /ˈte/ ('s/he has'), mes /ˈmɛs/or/ˈmes/ ('month') vs més /ˈmes/ ('more'), dona /ˈdɔnə/or/ˈdɔna/ ('woman') vs dóna /ˈdonə/or/ˈdona/ ('s/he gives'). In most cases, the word bearing no accent is either unstressed (as in the case of 'es' and 'te'), or the word without the accent is more common, usually a function word.

The different distribution of open e /ɛ/vsclosed e /e/ between Eastern Catalan and Western Catalan is reflected in some orthographic divergences between standard Catalan and Valencian norms, for example: anglès /əŋˈɡlɛs/ (Catalan) vs anglés /aŋˈɡles/ (Valencian) ('English'). In the Balearic Islands, open e /ɛ/ tends to be a centralised e (/ə/) in the same cases where open e contrasts with closed e in Catalan and Valencian. The cases where the difference of pronunciation of e can have graphical repercussions are the followings:[9]

Circumflex[edit]

The circumflex is rarely used in modern Catalan and Valencian, nonetheless it has been used in the beginning of the 19th century by Antoni Febrer i Cardona to represent schwa in the Balearic subdialects. According to the Diccionari català-valencià-balear, in modern times there are some cases where the circumflex can be used to indicate silent etymological sounds (similar to French)[10] or a contraction.[11] Contrary to the restrictions of the acute and grave accent, the circumflex can be used with all vowels ⟨â ê î ô û⟩, the most common, especially in Valencian, being ⟨â⟩ (i.e. due to the elision of /d/), e.g. mascletâes (instead of mascletades 'pyrotechnic festivals'), anâ (instead of anar 'to go'), témê (instead of témer 'to fear'), sortî (instead of sortir 'to exit'), ('to', preposition in colloquial Valencian).

Diaeresis[edit]

The diaeresis has two different uses: to mark hiatus over ⟨ï, ü⟩, and to mark that ⟨u⟩ is not silent in the groups ⟨gü, qü⟩.

If a diaeresis appears over an ⟨i⟩or⟨u⟩ that follows another vowel, it denotes a hiatus, examples:[12]

This diaeresis is not used over a stressed vowel that already should have an accent. Examples: suís /suˈis/ ('Swiss' masculine), but suïssa /suˈisə/or/suˈisa/ ('Swiss' feminine), suïs /ˈsuis/ ('that you sweat' subjunctive) (without the diaeresis, this last example would be pronounced /ˈsui̯s/, i.e. as only one syllable, like reis /ˈrei̯s/ 'kings').

Certain verb forms of verbs ending in -uir do not receive a diaeresis, although they are pronounced with separate syllables. This concerns the infinitive, gerund, future and conditional forms (for example traduir, traduint, traduiré and traduiria, all with bisyllabic /u.i/). All other forms of such verbs do receive a diaeresis on the ï according to the normal rules (e.g. traduïm, traduïa).

In addition to this, ⟨ü⟩ represents /w/ between a velar consonant /ɡ/or/k/ and a front vowel (⟨gu⟩ and ⟨qu⟩ are used to represent a hard (i.e. velar) pronunciation before ⟨i⟩or⟨e⟩).[13]

Forms of the verb argüir represents a rare case of the sequence /ɡu.i/, and the rules for /gu/ and /ui/ clash in this case. The ambiguity is resolved by an additional rule, which states that in cases where diaereses would appear on two consecutive letters, only the second receives one. This thus gives arguïm /arguˈim/, i.e. and arguïa /arguˈia/, but argüir /arˈgwir/, argüint /arˈgwint/ and argüiré /argwiˈre/ as these forms don't receive a diaeresis on the i normally, according to the exception above.

Ce trencada (c-cedilla)[edit]

Catalan and Valencian ce trencada (Ç ç), literally in English 'broken cee', is a modified c with a cedilla mark ( ¸ ). It is only used before ⟨a u o⟩ to indicate a soft c /s/, much like in Portuguese, Occitan or French (e.g. compare coça /ˈkosə/or/ˈkosa/ 'kick', coca /ˈkokə/or/ˈkoka/ 'cake' and cosa /ˈkɔzə/or/ˈkɔza/ 'thing'). In Catalan and Valencian, ce trencada also appears as last letter of a word (e.g. feliç /fəˈlis/or/feˈlis/ 'happy', falç /ˈfals/ 'sickle'), but then ç may be voiced to [z] before vowels and voiced consonants, e.g. feliçment /fəˌlizˈmen(t)/or/feˌlizˈmen(t)/ ('happily') and braç esquerre /ˈbɾaz əsˈkɛrə/or/ˈbɾaz esˈkɛre/ ('left arm').

Punt volat (middot)[edit]

The so-called punt volatormiddot is only used in the group ⟨ŀl⟩ (called elaorel(e) geminada, 'geminate el') to represent a geminated sound /lː/, as ⟨ll⟩ is used to represent the palatal lateral /ʎ/. This usage of the middot sign is a recent invention from the beginning of twentieth century (in medieval and modern Catalan, before Fabra's standardization, this symbol was sometimes used to note certain elisions, especially in poetry). The only (and improbable) case of ambiguity in the whole language that could arise is the pair ceŀla /ˈsɛlːə/or/ˈsɛlːa/ ('cell') vs cella /ˈsɛʎə/or/ˈseʎa/ ('eyebrow').

Hyphen[edit]

The hyphen (called a guionet) is used in Catalan and Valencian to separate a verb and the combination of pronouns that follow them (e.g. menjar-se-les), to separate certain compounds (e.g. vint-i-un and para-sol), and to split a word at the end of a line of text for the purpose of maintaining page margins.

Compounds are hyphenated in cases that involve numerals (e.g. trenta-sis, and trenta-sisè/é); cardinal points (e.g. sud-americà); repetitive and expressive compounds (xup-xup); those compounds in which the first element ends in a vowel and the second starts with ⟨r⟩, ⟨s⟩, or ⟨x⟩ (e.g. penya-segat); and those compounds in which the combination of the two elements can lead to wrong reading (e.g. pit-roig). There are also compound terms in which the first element carries a grave accent (mà-llarg), the construction no plus substantive[clarification needed] (but not no plus adjective, no-violència but the nacions no violentes) and certain singular constructions like abans-d'ahir and adéu-siau.

Since 1996, the normative set that in the none mentioned cases in the previous paragraph do not carry hyphen. Thus, the general norm set that the prefixed forms, aside from the cited exceptions, are written without hyphen (the only normative option, then, is to write arxienemic and fisicoquímic).[clarification needed]

In regard to numbers, hyphen is set according to the D-U-C rule (Desenes-Unitats-Centenes, 'Tens-Units-Hundreds'), thus, a hyphen is placed between tens and units (quaranta-dos) and between units and hundreds (tres-cents). For example, the number 35,422 is written trenta-cinc mil quatre-cents vint-i-dos.

In the case of the separation of a term at the end of line, syllable boundaries are maintained. Still, there are digraphs that can be separated and others that cannot. The digraphs that can be separated are those that, when splitting them, they result in two graphs the corresponding sound from which they share a phonetic trait with the sound of the digraph. (Thus, the digraph rr, for example it corresponds with the nearest sound of a rhotic alveolar trill. Cor-randes, calit-ja and as-sas-sí are words with digraphs that can be split). The digraphs that cannot be separated are those in which the two graphs correspond to sounds that they are not related with the sound of the digraph. (For example, the digraph ny cannot be separated.)

To orthographic effects, the syllabic separation of words follow the following norms:

ix (quei-xa), rr (car-rer), ss (pas-sar), sc (es-ce-na), l·l (vil-la), tj (jut-jat), tg (fet-ge), tx (pit-xer), tl (vet-la), tll (rot-llo), tm (rit-me), tn (cot-na), ts (pot-ser), tx (despat-xar), tz (set-ze), mm (im-mens), nn (in-no-cent)
gu (jo-guet), ny (pe-nya), qu (pa-quet), ig (ba-teig), ll (pe-lle-ter)
ad-herir, in-expert, ben-estar, mil-hòmens, des-encolar, vos-altres
d'a-mor, aber-rant, l'a-plicació, histò-ria

Apostrophe[edit]

Catalan and Valencian follow some apostrophation rules that serve to determine whether it is necessary to use an apostrophe (') with an article, preposition or pronoun or not if the word that follows it or precedes it begins or finishes in a vowel, respectively.

Article

The masculine singular article (elen, and dialectally also lo, in Continental Catalan, and es and so in Balearic, the so called salted article, with s) is apostrophated before all words of masculine gender that begin with a vowel, e.g. l'aviól'encantl'odin'Albert, s'arbre; with a silent h, e.g. l'homel'hamn'Hugs'home; with a liquid s, e.g. l'spal'Stuttgart. It is not apostrophated before of words that begin with a consonantic i or u (with or without h), el iogurt, el iode (or dialectally lo iogurt, lo iode).

In case of apostrophation, the specific forms al (dial. as), del (dial. des), pel (dial. pes), cal (dial. cas) and can are broken and become a l' (dial. a s'), de l' (dial. de s'), per l' (dial. per s'), ca l' (dial. ca s') and ca n' respectively.

The feminine singular article (lana and dialectally sa) are apostrophated in the following cases: When the following word start with a vowel: l'emociól'ungla, l'aigua, n'Elena; when the word start with a silent h: l'heural'holografia, n'Hermínia, s'horabaixa. It is not apostrophated in the following cases: When it goes before word that starts with a consonantic ioru (with h or not): la hiena; when it goes before a word that begins with unstressed ioru (with h or not): la humitatla universitatla imatge; before some specific terms like la una (when referring to the time), la irala hostla Haia (toponym); before the name of the letters (la ila hacla essa); before a word that start with s followed by a consonant, la Scala de Milà.

Traditionally, to avoid ambiguities, words beginning with the negative prefix a- did not take an apostrophe. Nowadays, general apostrophation rules are followed in written text: l'anormalitat, l'amoralitat, l'atipicitat, l'asimetria, l'asèpsia, etc. The Diccionari de l'Institut d'Estudis Catalans (DIEC) of 1995 started to apply the new criteria; however, it was never formulated explicitly. In the same way, the introduction of DIEC writes about the abnormality of the situation, and the outline of the new normative grammar that prepares the IEC already does not collect that traditional exception.

Preposition de

The preposition de takes the apostrophe before a vowel (with silent h, or without): d'aiguad'envejad'humitat. It does not apostrophate however before the following cases: words that start with a consonantic ioru (with silent h or without); de iodede iogade uombatde iogurt, de Utahde ouija; before names of letters; de a, de hac. In general it does not apostrophate in case of metalanguage: el plural de alt és alts; before a liquid s: de Stalin.

Weak pronouns

Weak pronouns take the apostrophe in the following cases:

Before a verb that starts with a vowel, using its elided form: m'agradan'abastavas'estimaranl'aconseguiria. At the end of a verb that finishes in a vowel, using the reduced form: menja'ntrenca'lfondre'scompra'ns. When there are two, the second if the orthographic rules allow it: me'nli'nse'mte'lsla'nn'hi; if it is possible, it takes the apostrophe with the following word, like me n'ha dut tres. The apostrophe always goes the further to the right possible: te l'emportes, not *te'l emportes.

Does not take the apostrophe:

The pronouns us, voshiholilesus el donoorvos el donese us esperavaorse vos esperava. Like in the case of the article, the pronoun before words that start by unstressed i and u (with silent h or without): la ignorala hi prenla humitejaremla usàvem. It also does not take the apostrophe the first weak pronoun in the forms la hi and se us.

Capitalization[edit]

Catalan and Valencian do not capitalize the days of the week, months, or national adjectives.[14]

dilluns, setembre, anglès
'Monday', 'September', 'English'

Punctuation[edit]

Catalan and Valencian punctuation rules are similar to English, with some minor differences.[15]

Què proposes, doncs?
El que hauriem de fer —s'atreví a suggerir— és anar a...
'What do you propose, then?'
'What we should do' she ventured to suggest 'is go to and ...'

Other conventions[edit]

The distribution of the two rhotics /r/ and /ɾ/ closely parallels that of Spanish. Between vowels, the two contrast but they are otherwise in complementary distribution: in the onset, an alveolar trill, [r], appears unless preceded by a consonant; different dialects vary in regards to rhotics in the coda with Western Catalan generally featuring an alveolar tap, [ɾ], and Central Catalan dialects like those of Barcelona or Girona featuring a weakly trilled [r] unless it precedes a vowel-initial word in the same prosodic unit, in which case [ɾ] appears.[16]

In Eastern Catalan and North Western Catalan, most instances of word-final ⟨r⟩ are silent, but there are plenty of unpredictable exceptions (e.g. in Central Eastern Catalan por [ˈpo] 'fear' but mar [ˈmɑɾ] 'sea'). In Central Eastern Catalan monosyllabic words with a pronounced final ⟨r⟩ get a reinforcement final consonant [t] when in absolute final position (e.g. final ⟨r⟩ofcor ('heart') in reina del meu cor /ˈrejnə dəl ˈmew ˈkɔrt/ 'queen of my heart' vs el cor es mou /əl ˈkɔɾ əz ˈmɔw/ 'the heart is moving').

In Valencian, most instances of word-final ⟨r⟩ are pronounced.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Final /b, d, ɡ//p, t, k/ (e.g. club, fred, reg).
  • ^ a b c d e f Before iore.
  • ^ a b c d At the end of a word or a syllable only.
  • ^ Before a bilabial consonant (/n/ /m/: enmig), before a palatal (/n/ /ɲ/: àngel), before a velar (/n/ /ŋ/: sang), etc.
  • ^ a b At the beginning of a word.
  • ^ a b In many dialects (except Balearic, Algherese and standard Valencian) /v/ has merged into /b/.
  • ^ a b c After another vowel.
  • ^ In Insular Catalan, some instances of è are realised as /ə/.
  • References[edit]

    1. ^ Badia i Margarit, Antoni M. «El procés d'unificació de l'ortografia catalana».
  • ^ Vallverdú, Francesc, ed. (2013). Enciclopèdia de la Llengua Catalana. Barcelona. ISBN 978-84-297-5026-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • ^ Carreras, Joan Costa, ed. (2009). The Architect of Modern Catalan: Selected writings. Translated by Yates, Alan. John Benjamins Publishing. ISBN 978-9027289247.
  • ^ a b "Institut d'Estudis Catalans - Ortografia catalana" (PDF). oiec.iec.cat. Institut d’Estudis Catalans. May 2017. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
  • ^ a b Wheeler (2005:6)
  • ^ "A List of Local Keyboard Layout in 24 Countries/Regions". sites.google.com.
  • ^ Altarriba, Núria (2013-01-24). "Cent anys de les Normes Ortogràfiques de l'Institut d'Estudis Catalans". Biblioteca de Catalunya.
  • ^ a b Estàndard oral valencià. L'alfabet, AVL, p. 36.
  • ^ Guia d'usos lingüístics, Institut Interuniversitari de Filologia Valenciana, 2002. Diferències dialectals en la distribució de la e tònica, p. 40
  • ^ accent. Diccionari català-valencià-balear
  • ^ circumflex. Diccionari català-valencià-balear
  • ^ Wheeler (2005:8)
  • ^ Wheeler (2005:7–8)
  • ^ Swan 2001, p. 97.
  • ^ a b c d e Wheeler, Yates & Dols 1999, p. 620.
  • ^ Padgett (2003:2)
  • Bibliography[edit]


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