Near-Open Front Unrounded Vowel

The near-open front unrounded vowel, or near-low front unrounded vowel, is a type of vowel sound.

The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is æ, a lowercase of the Æ ligature. Both the symbol and the sound are commonly referred to as "ash".

Near-open front unrounded vowel
æ
IPA Number325
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)æ
Unicode (hex)U+00E6
X-SAMPA{
Braille⠩ (braille pattern dots-146)

The rounded counterpart of [æ], the near-open front rounded vowel (for which the IPA provides no separate symbol) has been reported to occur allophonically in Danish; see open front rounded vowel for more information.

In practice, æ is sometimes used to represent the open front unrounded vowel; see the introduction to that page for more information.

In IPA transcriptions of Hungarian and Valencian, this vowel is typically written with ɛ.

Features

  • Its vowel height is near-open, also known as near-low, which means the tongue is positioned similarly to an open vowel, but is slightly more constricted – that is, the tongue is positioned similarly to a low vowel, but slightly higher.
  • Its vowel backness is front, which means the tongue is positioned forward in the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant.
  • It is unrounded, which means that the lips are not rounded.

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Afrikaans Standard 'perd' [pæːrt] 'horse' Allophone of /ɛ/, in some dialects, before /k χ l r/. See Afrikaans phonology
Äiwoo ikuwä [ikuwæ] 'I go' Distinguished from both [a] and [ɑ~ɒ].
Arabic Standard كتاب / 'kitāb' [kiˈtæːb] 'book' Allophone of /a/ in the environment of plain labial and coronal consonants as well as /j/ (depending on the speaker's accent). See Arabic phonology
Azerbaijani 'Azərbaycan' [ɑːzæɾbɑjˈd͡ʒɑn] 'Azerbaijan'
Bambam 'bätä' [ˈbætæ] 'stem'
Bashkir йәй / yäy 'summer'
Bengali /ek [æk] 'one' See Bengali phonology
Bulgarian
Moesian dialects млечен/mlečen [mlæt͡ʃɛn] 'made from milk' Descendant of Proto-Slavic *ě in places where Standard Bulgarian would have /ɛ/. See Yat.
Rup dialects Descendant of Proto-Slavic *ě in all positions. See Yat.
Teteven dialect мъж/măž [mæʃ] 'man' In place of Standard Bulgarian [ɤ̞] (written as ъ).
Erkech dialect
Catalan Majorcan tesi [ˈt̪æzi] 'thesis' Main realization of /ɛ/. See Catalan phonology
Valencian
Chechen аьрзу / ärzu [ærzu] 'eagle'
Danish Standard dansk [ˈtænˀsk] 'Danish' Most often transcribed in IPA with ⟨a⟩ – the way it is realized by certain older or upper-class speakers. See Danish phonology
Dutch pen [pæn] 'pen' Allophone of /ɛ/ before /n/ and coda /l/. In non-standard accents this allophone is generalized to other positions, where [ɛ] is used in Standard Dutch. See Dutch phonology
English Cultivated New Zealand cat 'cat' Higher in other New Zealand varieties. See New Zealand English phonology
General American See English phonology
Conservative Received Pronunciation Fully open [a] in contemporary RP. See English phonology
Estonian väle [ˈvæ̠le̞ˑ] 'agile' Near-front. See Estonian phonology
Finnish mäki [ˈmæki] 'hill' See Finnish phonology
French Parisian bain [bæ̃] 'bath' Nasalized; typically transcribed in IPA with ɛ̃. See French phonology
Quebec ver [væːʁ] 'worm' Allophone of /ɛ/ before /ʁ/ or in open syllables, and of /a/ in closed syllables. See Quebec French phonology
German Standard Austrian erlauben [æˈlɑɔ̯bn̩] 'allow' Variant of pretonic [ɛɐ̯]. See Standard German phonology
West Central German accents oder [ˈoːdæ] 'or' Used instead of [ɐ]. See Standard German phonology
Northern accents alles [ˈa̝ləs] 'everything' Lower and often also more back in other accents. See Standard German phonology
Western Swiss accents spät [ʃpæːt] 'late' Open-mid [ɛː] or close-mid [] in other accents; contrasts with the open-mid /ɛː/. See Standard German phonology
Greek Macedonia γάτα/gáta [ˈɣætæ] 'cat' See Modern Greek phonology
Thessaly
Thrace
Pontic καλάθια/kaláthia [kaˈlaθæ] 'baskets'
Hungarian nem [næm] 'no' Typically transcribed in IPA with ɛ. See Hungarian phonology
Kanoê [æː] 'tobacco'
Kazakh әйел/äiel [æ̝ˈje̘l̪ʲ] 'woman' Varies between near-open and open-mid.
Kurdish Sorani (Central) گاڵته/ galte [gäːɫtʲæ] 'joke' Equal to Palewani (Southern) front [a]. See Kurdish phonology
Lakon rävräv [ræβræβ] 'evening'
Limburgish twelf [ˈtβ̞æ̠ləf] 'twelve' Front or near-front, depending on the dialect. The example word is from the Maastrichtian dialect, in which the vowel is near-front.
Lithuanian jachtą [ˈjæːxt̪aː] 'yacht' (accusative) See Lithuanian phonology
Luxembourgish Käpp [kʰæpʰ] 'heads' See Luxembourgish phonology
Norwegian Urban East lær [læːɾ] 'leather' See Norwegian phonology
Persian هشت/hašt [hæʃt] 'eight'
Portuguese Some dialects pedra [ˈpædɾɐ] 'stone' Stressed vowel. In other dialects closer /ɛ/. See Portuguese phonology
Some European speakers também [tɐˈmæ̃] 'also' Stressed vowel, allophone of nasal vowel /ẽ̞/.
Romanian Bukovinian dialect piele [ˈpæle] 'skin' Corresponds to [je] in standard Romanian. Also identified in some Central Transylvanian sub-dialects. See Romanian phonology
Russian пять / pja 'five' Allophone of /a/ between palatalized consonants. See Russian phonology
Serbo-Croatian Zeta-Raška dialect дан/dan [d̪æn̪] 'day' Regional reflex of Proto-Slavic *ь and *ъ. Sometimes nasalised.
Sinhala ඇය/æya [æjə] 'she'
Slovak mäso [mæso] 'meat, flesh' In conversation sometimes pronounced as [e] or [a]. See Slovak phonology
Swedish Central Standard ära 'hono(u)r' Allophone of /ɛː, ɛ/ before /r/. See Swedish phonology
Stockholm läsa [²læːsä] 'to read' Realization of /ɛː, ɛ/ for younger speakers. Higher [ɛː, ɛ̝ ~ ɛ] for other speakers
Turkish sen [s̪æn̪] 'you' Allophone of /e/ before syllable-final /m, n, l, r/. In a limited number of words (but not before /r/), it is in free variation with []. See Turkish phonology

See also

Notes

References

Tags:

Near-Open Front Unrounded Vowel FeaturesNear-Open Front Unrounded Vowel OccurrenceNear-Open Front Unrounded VowelInternational Phonetic AlphabetTypographic ligatureVowelÆ

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