Cover symbols used in linguistics
Appearance
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Linguists use a variety of symbols to represent not just single sounds, but certain particular classes of sounds. They are usually capital letters. This article lists those "cover symbols".
Consonants
[edit]Symbol | Definition |
---|---|
C | Any consonant |
F | Any fricative consonant. |
G | Any glide or semivowel. |
H | (Indo-European studies) Any laryngeal consonant. |
L | Any lateral consonant. |
N | Any nasal consonant. |
r | Any rhotic consonant, regardless of its phonetic realization. |
R | Any resonant consonant. |
S | Any sibilant consonant. |
T | Any dental consonant. |
Vowels
[edit]Capitalized vowels are commonly used in discussions of languages with vowel harmony. They often indicate different harmonic variants of an underlying archiphonemic vowel.
Some vowel symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet, such as ⟨ə, ø, y⟩ are also sometimes used as cover symbols.
Symbol | Description |
---|---|
A | A open vowel or fronted vowel. |
ə | A reduced vowel or central vowel. |
O | A front or back rounded mid vowel. |
ö | A front (more rarely central) rounded mid vowel. |
ø | |
U | A rounded vowel or backed vowel. |
ü | A front (more rarely central) rounded close vowel. |
y | |
V | Any vowel. |
Ṽ | Any nasal vowel. |
Other symbols
[edit]Symbol | Description |
---|---|
X | Any sound. |