Open-Mid Back Rounded Vowel

The open-mid back rounded vowel, or low-mid back rounded vowel, is a type of vowel sound, used in some spoken languages.

The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ɔ. The IPA symbol is a turned letter c and both the symbol and the sound are commonly called "open-o". The name open-o represents the sound, in that it is like the sound represented by o, the close-mid back rounded vowel, except it is more open. It also represents the symbol, which can be remembered as an o which has been "opened" by removing part of the closed circular shape.

Open-mid back rounded vowel
ɔ
IPA Number306
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ɔ
Unicode (hex)U+0254
X-SAMPAO
Braille⠣ (braille pattern dots-126)

In English, the symbol ɔ (or ɔː) is typically associated with the vowel in "thought", but in Received Pronunciation (standard British English), Australian English, New Zealand English and South African English that vowel is produced with considerably stronger lip rounding and higher tongue position than that of cardinal [ɔ], i.e. as close-mid [oː] or somewhat lower. Open-mid [ɔː] or even open [ɒː] realizations are found in North American English (where this vowel is often indistinguishable from the open back unrounded vowel in "bra") and Scottish English as well as Hiberno-English, Northern England English and Welsh English, though in the last three accent groups closer, [oː]-like realizations are also found. In RP, the open-mid realization of /ɔː/ has been obsolete since the 1930s. Pronouncing that vowel as such is subject to correction for non-native speakers aiming at RP.

In Received Pronunciation and Australian English, the open-mid back rounded vowel occurs as the main allophone of the LOT vowel /ɒ/. The contrast between /ɔː/ and /ɒ/ is thus strongly maintained, with the former vowel being realized as close-mid [oː] and the latter as open-mid [ɔ], similarly to the contrast between /o/ and /ɔ/ found in German, Italian and Portuguese.

Features

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Albanian Tosk tortë [ˈtɔɾtə] 'cake'
Armenian Eastern հողմ hoġm [hɔʁm] 'storm'
Assamese কৰ / kor [kɔɹ] 'to do' May also be transcribed as fully low [ɒ] or "over-rounded" [ɒ̹]
Bavarian Amstetten dialect wås [β̞ɔs] 'what' Contrasts close [u], near-close [], close-mid [o] and open-mid [ɔ] back rounded vowels in addition to the open central unrounded [ä]. Typically transcribed in IPA with ɒ.
Bengali অর্থ ortho [ɔrt̪ʰo] 'meaning' See Bengali phonology
Bulgarian род rod [rɔt̪] 'kin' See Bulgarian phonology
Catalan soc [ˈsɔk] 'clog' See Catalan phonology
Chinese Cantonese ngo5 [ŋɔː˩˧] 'I, me, my' See Cantonese phonology
Hokkien bó͘ [bɔ⁵²] 'wife' See Hokkien phonology
Cipu Tirisino dialect kødø [kɔ̟̀ɗɔ̟́] 'cut down!' Near-back.
Danish Standard kort [ˈkʰɔːt] 'map' Most often transcribed in IPA with ɒː. See Danish phonology
Dutch Standard Belgian och 'alas' 'Very tense, with strong lip-rounding', strongly pharyngealized (although less so in standard Belgian) and somewhat fronted. See Dutch phonology
Standard Northern
English Australian not 'not' See Australian English phonology
Estuary
New Zealand May be somewhat fronted. Often transcribed in IPA with ɒ. See New Zealand English phonology
Received Pronunciation /ɒ/ has shifted up in emerging RP.
General American thought [θɔːt] 'thought' Mainly in speakers without the cot–caught merger. It may be lower [ɒ]. (It is rarely lowered to /ɒ/ before liquids /l ɹ/, and may thus be more familiar to many North Americans in r-colored form, /ɔ˞/.)
Scottish Most Scottish dialects exhibit the cot-caught merger, the outcome of which is a vowel of [ɔ] quality.
Sheffield goat [ɡɔːt] 'goat' Common realization of the GOAT vowel particularly for males.
Newfoundland but [bɔt] 'but' Less commonly unrounded [ʌ]. See English phonology
Faroese lálla [ˈlɔtla] 'seal flipper' See Faroese phonology
French Parisian sotte 'silly' (f.) The Parisian realization has been variously described as a back vowel [ɔ] centralized to [ɞ] before /ʁ/ and central [ɞ]. See French phonology
Galician home [ˈɔmɪ] 'man' See Galician phonology
Georgian სწრი stsori [st͡sʼɔɾi] 'correct'
German Standard voll 'full' See Standard German phonology
Hindustani Hindi कौन /kaun [kɔːn] 'who' See Hindustani phonology
Urdu کَون/kaun
Italian parola 'word' Near-back. See Italian phonology
Javanese ꦫꦱ / råså [rɔsɔ] taste, feeling
Kaingang [ˈpɔ] 'stone'
Kera [dɔ̟̀l] 'hard earth' Near-back.
Kokborok kwrwi [kɔrɔi] 'not'
Limburgish mòn [mɔːn] 'moon' Lower [ɔ̞ː] in the Maastrichtian dialect. The example word is from the Hasselt dialect.
Lower Sorbian osba [ˈpʂɔz̪bä] 'a request'
Low German Most dialects stok [stɔk] 'stick' May be more open [ɒ] in the Netherlands or more closed [o̞] in Low Prussian dialects.
Various dialects slaap [slɔːp] 'sleep' May be as low as [ɒː] and as high as [oː] in other dialects.
Southern Eastphalian brâd [brɔːt] 'bread' Corresponds to [oː], [ou̯], [ɔu̯], [ɛo̯] in other dialects.
Luxembourgish Sonn [zɔn] 'son' Possible realization of /o/. See Luxembourgish phonology
Malay Standard sotong [sotɔŋ] 'squid' Possible realization of /o/ and /u/ in closed final syllables. See Malay phonology
Negeri Sembilan كيت / kita [kitɔ] 'we' (inclusive) See Negeri Sembilan Malay
Kelantan-Pattani بياسا / biasa [bɛsɔ] 'normal' See Kelatan-Pattani Malay
Norwegian Some dialects så [sɔː] 'so' Present e.g. in Telemark; realized as mid [ɔ̝ː] in other dialects. See Norwegian phonology
Occitan òda [ɔðɔ] 'ode' See Occitan phonology
Odia ର୍ଥ [ɔɾtʰɔ] 'meaning'
Polish kot 'cat' See Polish phonology
Portuguese Most dialects fofoca [fɔˈfɔ̞kɐ] 'gossip' Stressed vowel might be lower. The presence and use of other unstressed ⟨o⟩ allophones, such as [ o ʊ u], varies according to dialect.
Some speakers bronca [ˈbɾɔ̃kə] 'scolding' Stressed vowel, allophone of nasal vowel /õ̞/. See Portuguese phonology
Russian Some speakers сухой sukhoy [s̪ʊˈxɔj] 'dry' More commonly realized as mid []. See Russian phonology
Slovak Standard ohúriť [ˈɔɦu̞ːri̞c] 'to stun' See Slovak phonology
Swedish Standard moll [mɔlː] 'minor scale' See Swedish phonology
Tagalog oyayi [ʔɔˈjajɪ] 'lullaby' See Tagalog phonology
Thai ngo [ŋɔː˧] 'to bend'
Temne pɔn [pɔ̟̀n] 'swamp' Near-back.
Ukrainian любов lyubov [lʲuˈbɔw] 'love' See Ukrainian phonology
Upper Sorbian pos [pɔs̪] 'dog' See Upper Sorbian phonology
Welsh siop [ʃɔp] 'shop' See Welsh phonology
West Frisian rôt [rɔːt] 'rat' See West Frisian phonology
Yoruba [example needed] Nasalized; may be near-open [ɔ̞̃] instead.

See also

Notes

Tags:

Open-Mid Back Rounded Vowel FeaturesOpen-Mid Back Rounded Vowel OccurrenceOpen-Mid Back Rounded VowelClose-mid back rounded vowelInternational Phonetic AlphabetLanguageSpeech communicationVowel

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