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In IPA usage, the ejective mark always modifies a letter. It may be typeset larger than an apostrophe, as here. |
Translingual
editEtymology
editUse for glottal stop derives from the apostrophe, for example in Hawaiian (now replaced by the okina to distinguish it from an actual apostrophe).
Use to mark ejective consonants started with transliteration of Georgian script; it was an adaptation of the spiritus lenis and contrasted with the spiritus asper used to mark aspirated consonants, as the most salient distinctive feature of Georgian ejectives was that they were not aspirated. Usage extended from there to other languages with ejective consonants.
Symbol
editʼ
- (IPA) an ejective consonant
- e.g. [kʼ], [tʼ], [sʼ].
- (UPA) glottal closure:
- E.g. kʼ is k with simultaneous glottal closure.
- mⁱeʼr or mⁱe̓r with a glottalized vowel.
- ʼeppä ʼollu with epenthetic glottal stops separating the vowels.
- transliteration of Semitic glottal stop (aleph and hamza).
- Synonym: ʾ
Usage notes
editAmericanist phonetic notation may instead use a combining diacritic ⟨◌̓⟩ for ejective consonants.
Derived terms
editLetters/digraphs that contain ⟨ʼ⟩:
- vowels: aʼ, eʼ, iʼ, oʼ, uʼ
- sonorantns: lʼ, mʼ, nʼ, wʼ, yʼ
- plosives: bʼ, pʼ, tʼ, ʈʼ, cʼ, kʼ, kyʼ, kwʼ, ḵʼ, ḵwʼ, kpʼ, qʼ, qʼu
- affricates: cʼ, chʼ, chwʼ, čʼ, djʼ, dsʼ, tsʼ, tjʼ, tlʼ, tłʼ, txʼ, tẍʼ, tgʼ, tyʼ, tzʼ
- fricatives: sʼ, šʼ, xʼ, ȟʼ
- clicks: ʘʼ, ǀʼ, ǀʼh, cʼ, cʼh, cgʼ, dcgʼ, ǁʼ, ǁʼh, xʼ, xʼh, xgʼ, dxgʼ, ǃʼ, ǃʼh, qʼh, qgʼ, dqgʼ, 𝼊ʼ, ‼ʼ, ǂʼ, ǂʼh, çʼ, çʼh, çgʼ, dçgʼ
- ʼb, ʼd, ʼgh, ʼl, ʼm, ʼn, ʼw, ʼy
Further reading
edit- Modifier letter apostrophe on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Avokaya
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
Bodo (India)
editLetter
editʼ (ʼ)
Cayuga
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ
- Alternative form of ˀ
Chamorro
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- The first letter of the Chamorro alphabet, used for the glottal stop.
Chiwere
editAlternative forms
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- A letter of the Chiwere alphabet, written in the Latin script.
Chukchi
editLetter
editʼ (ʼ)
- The thirty-seventh letter of the Chukchi alphabet, written in the Cyrillic script.
See also
editDogri
editʼ (ʼ)
- Low rising tone on a short vowel /ə ɪ ʊ/, e.g. लʼत्त /lə̌tː/ 'leg'.
Guaraní
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- The thirty-third letter of the Guaraní alphabet, called puso, used for the glottal stop.
Khoekhoe
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
Kildin Sami
editAlternative forms
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- The eleventh letter of the Kildin Sami Cyrillic alphabet
See also
edit- (Cyrillic-script letters) А а, А̄ а̄, Ӓ ӓ, Б б, В в, Г г, Д д, Е е, Е̄ е̄, Ё ё, Ё̄ ё̄, Ж ж, З з, Һ һ, ʼ, И и, Ӣ ӣ, Й й, Ј ј, Ҋ ҋ, К к, Л л, Ӆ ӆ, М м, Ӎ ӎ, Н н, Ӊ ӊ, Ӈ ӈ, О о, О̄ о̄, П п, Р р, Ҏ ҏ, С с, Т т, У у, Ӯ ӯ, Ф ф, Х х, Ц ц, Ч ч, Ш ш, Щ щ, Ъ ъ, Ы ы, Ь ь, Ҍ ҍ, Э э, Э̄ э̄, Ӭ ӭ, Ю ю, Ю̄ ю̄, Я я, Я̄ я̄
Kwak'wala
editAlternative forms
edit- ʔ in Liqʼwala dialect
Pronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- A letter of the Kwak'wala alphabet, written in the Latin script.
See also
edit- Uʼmista (Latin-script letters) A a, A̱ a̱, B b, D d, Dł dł, Dz dz, E e, G g, Gw gw, G̱ g̱, G̱w g̱w, H h, I i, K k, Kw kw, K̓ k̓, K̓w k̓w, Ḵ ḵ, Ḵw ḵw, Ḵ̓ ḵ̓, Ḵ̓w ḵ̓w, L l, ʼL ʼl, Ł ł, M m, ʼM ʼm, N n, ʼN ʼn, O o, P p, P̓ p̓, S s, T t, T̓ t̓, Tł tł, T̓ł t̓ł, Ts ts, T̓s t̓s, U u, W w, ʼW ʼw, X x, Xw xw, X̱ x̱, X̱w x̱w, Y y, ʼY ʼy, ʼ
- Liq̓ʷala (Latin-script letters) A a, Ə ə, B b, D d, , Dᶻ dᶻ, E e, G g, Gʷ gʷ, Ǧ ǧ, Ǧʷ ǧʷ, H h, I i, K k, Kʷ kʷ, K̓ k̓, K̓ʷ k̓ʷ, Q q, Qʷ qʷ, Q̓ q̓, Q̓ʷ q̓ʷ, L l, L̓ l̓, Ł ł, M m, M̓ m̓, N n, N̓ n̓, O o, P p, P̓ p̓, S s, T t, T̓ t̓, ƛ, ̓ ƛ̓, C c, C̓ c̓, U u, W w, W̓ w̓, X x, Xʷ xʷ, X̌ x̌, X̌ʷ x̌ʷ, Y y, Y̓ y̓, ʔ
Lakota
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- A letter of the Lakota alphabet, written in the Latin script.
See also
edit- (Latin-script letters) A a (Á á), Aŋ aŋ (Áŋ áŋ), B b, Č č, Čh čh, Čʼ čʼ, E e (É é), G g, Ǧ ǧ, H h, Ȟ ȟ, Ȟʼ ȟʼ, I i (Í í), Iŋ iŋ (Íŋ íŋ), K k, Kh kh, Kȟ kȟ, Kʼ kʼ, L l, M m, N n, O o (Ó ó), P p, Ph ph, Pȟ pȟ, Pʼ pʼ, S s, Sʼ sʼ, Š š, Šʼ šʼ, T t, Th th, Tȟ tȟ, Tʼ tʼ, U u (Ú ú), Uŋ uŋ (Úŋ úŋ), W w, Y y, Z z, Ž ž, ʼ
Lashi
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- High-falling lexical tone.
Usage notes
editA final glottal stop is unwritten on syllables with this tone. Thus aʼ transcribes both /a᷇/ and /a᷇ʔ/. Full falling tone is unmarked, except for syllables with a final glottal stop, which is transcribed ⟨,⟩.
Lhao Vo
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
Usage notes
editA final glottal stop is unwritten. Thus /a/ with a final plosive and high tone is written abʼ adʼ agʼ aʼ for [áp át ák áʔ]. High tone is written ⟨ˮ⟩ with a final vowel or nasal.
Lisu
editLetter
editʼ
Usage notes
edit- Used to indicate nasalisation and is combined with tone marks.
Mam
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ
Navajo
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ
- The nineteenth letter of the Navajo alphabet. It is used before or after a vowel to indicate a glottal stop.
Usage notes
editEvery Navajo word begins with either the glottal stop or another consonant. If an orthographic vowel begins a word, it is pronounced with a glottal stop: ooljééʼ (sometimes spelled ʼooljééʼ).
⟨ʼ⟩ forms the following Navajo letters: chʼ, kʼ, tʼ, tłʼ, tsʼ.
See also
editO'odham
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- The letter of the O'odham alphabet, written in the Latin script.
Pilagá
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- A letter of the Pilagá alphabet, written in the Latin script.
See also
editSeneca
editAlternative forms
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- The letter of the Seneca alphabet, written in the Latin script.
Somali
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- The first letter of the Somali alphabet, called alef and written in the Latin script.
Usage notes
edit- This is the first letter of the Somali alphabet, which follows Arabic abjad order. It is followed by B. It is rarely used in the initial position.
See also
editTabasaran
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- The forty-eighth letter of the Tabasaran alphabet, written in the Cyrillic script.
See also
editTahitian
editAlternative forms
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- A letter of the Tahitian alphabet, the ʻeta.
Usage notes
editIn formal typesetting, the ʼeta is rotated 90 degrees. This does not have a separate Unicode character.
All Tahitian lemmas on Wiktionary use the ʻokina ⟨ʻ⟩ as the Unicode character for this letter.
Tundra Nenets
editPronunciation
editLetter
editʼ (no case)
- The thirty-fifth letter of the Tundra Nenets alphabet, written in the Cyrillic script.
Usage notes
editMarks instances of the glottal stop /ʔ/ that alternate with nasal consonants н (n°) /n/, ӈ (ŋ°) /ŋ/ in inflection, in contrast with the letter ˮ. Often transcribed h in scholarly works.
See also
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