Open-Mid Back Unrounded Vowel

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

The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ʌ, graphically a rotated lowercase "v" (called a turned V but created as a small-capital ⟨ᴀ⟩ without the crossbar, even though some vendors display it as a real turned v). Both the symbol and the sound are commonly referred to as a "wedge", "caret" or "hat". In transcriptions for English, this symbol is commonly used for the near-open central unrounded vowel and in transcriptions for Danish, it is used for the open back rounded vowel.

Open-mid back unrounded vowel
ʌ
IPA Number314
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ʌ
Unicode (hex)U+028C
X-SAMPAV
Braille⠬ (braille pattern dots-346)

Features

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Ajië kë [kʌˀ] 'pot' Distinct from /ə/
Catalan Solsonès tarda [ˈtaɾð̞ʌ̃ː] 'afternoon' Realization of final unstressed /ə/
Emilian most Emilian dialects Bulåggna [buˈlʌɲːɐ] 'Bologna' It corresponds to a sound between /ɔ/ to /ä/; written ò in some spellings
English Cape Town lot [lʌt] 'lot' It corresponds to a weakly rounded [ɒ̈] in all other South African dialects. See South African English phonology
Natal
Cardiff thought [θʌːt] 'thought' For some speakers it may be rounded and closer. See English phonology
General South African no [nʌː] 'no' May be a diphthong [ʌʊ̯] instead. See South African English phonology
General American gut 'gut' In some dialects, fronted to [ɜ], or fronted and lowered to [ɐ]. In Standard Southern British English, [ʌ] is increasingly heard in place of [ɐ] to avoid the trap-strut merger. See English phonology and Northern Cities Vowel Shift
Inland Northern American
Multicultural London
Newfoundland
Northern East Anglian
Philadelphia
Scottish
Some Estuary English speakers
Some Standard Southern British speakers
French Picardy alors [aˈlʌʀ̥] 'so' Corresponding to /ɔ/ in standard French.
German Chemnitz dialect machen [ˈmʌχɴ̩] 'to do' Allophone of /ʌ, ʌː/ (which phonetically are central [ɜ, ɜː]) before and after /ŋ, kʰ, k, χ, ʁ/. Exact backness varies; it is most posterior before /χ, ʁ/.
Haida ḵwaáay [qʷʰʌʔáːj] 'the rock' Allophone of /a/ (sometimes also /aː/) after uvular and epiglottal consonants.
Irish Ulster dialect ola [ʌl̪ˠə] 'oil' See Irish phonology
Kaingang [ˈɾʌ] 'mark' Varies between back [ʌ] and central [ɜ].
Kashmiri از [ʌz] 'today' Allophone of [ɐ]. Used only in monosyllables. Typical of the Srinagar variety.
Kensiu [hʌʎ] 'stream'
Korean / neo [nʌ̹] 'you' See Korean phonology
Lillooet [example needed] Retracted counterpart of /ə/.
Mah Meri [example needed] Allophone of /ə/; can be mid central [ə] or close-mid back [ɤ] instead.
Nepali असल/asal [ʌsʌl] 'good' See Nepali phonology
Portuguese Greater Lisbon area leite [ˈɫ̪ʌjt̪ɨ̞] 'milk' Allophone of /ɐ/ before [j]. Corresponds to [e] in other accents. See Portuguese phonology
Russian Standard Saint Petersburg голова/golová [ɡəɫ̪ʌˈvä] 'head' Corresponds to [ɐ] in standard Moscow pronunciation; occurs mostly immediately before stressed syllables. See Russian phonology
Tamil [example needed] Nasalized. Phonetic realization of the sequence /am/, may be [õ] or [ã] instead. See Tamil phonology
Xavante [jʌm] 'seed' The nasal version [ʌ̃] also occurs.

Before World War II, the /ʌ/ of Received Pronunciation was phonetically close to a back vowel [ʌ], which has since shifted forward towards [ɐ] (a near-open central unrounded vowel). Daniel Jones reported his speech (southern British) as having an advanced back vowel [ʌ̟] between his central /ə/ and back /ɔ/; however, he also reported that other southern speakers had a lower and even more advanced vowel that approached cardinal [a]. In American English varieties, such as in the West, the Midwest, and the urban South, the typical phonetic realization of the phoneme /ʌ/ is an open-mid central [ɜ]. Truly backed variants of /ʌ/ that are phonetically [ʌ] can occur in Inland Northern American English, Newfoundland English, Philadelphia English, some of African-American English, and (old-fashioned) white Southern American English in coastal plain and Piedmont areas. However, the letter ʌ is still commonly used to indicate this phoneme, even in the more common varieties with central variants [ɐ] or [ɜ]. That may be because of both tradition and some other dialects retaining the older pronunciation.

Notes

References

Tags:

Open-Mid Back Unrounded Vowel FeaturesOpen-Mid Back Unrounded Vowel OccurrenceOpen-Mid Back Unrounded VowelCaretDanish languageEnglish languageInternational Phonetic AlphabetLanguageNear-open central vowelOpen back rounded vowelSpeech communicationTurned vVVowel

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