Open-Mid Front Unrounded Vowel

The open-mid front unrounded vowel, or low-mid front 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 a Latinized variant of the Greek lowercase epsilon, ɛ.

Open-mid front unrounded vowel
ɛ
IPA Number303
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ɛ
Unicode (hex)U+025B
X-SAMPAE
Braille⠜ (braille pattern dots-345)

Features

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Akan (Twi) ɛyɛ [ɛjɛ] 'it is good/fine' See Akan phonology
Arabic See Imāla
Armenian Eastern էջ/ēj [ɛd͡ʒ] 'page'
Bavarian Amstetten dialect [example needed] Typically transcribed in IPA with æ.
Bengali /ek [ɛk] 'one' Alternative transcription and phonetic realisation of [æ] and an allophone of [e]. See Bengali phonology
Bulgarian пет/pet [pɛt̪] 'five' See Bulgarian phonology
Catalan set [ˈsɛt] 'seven' See Catalan phonology
Chinese Mandarin / tiān 'sky' Height varies between mid and open depending on the speaker. See Standard Chinese phonology
Chuvash ҫепĕç ['ɕɛp̬ɘɕ] 'gentle, tender'
Czech led [lɛt] 'ice' In Bohemian Czech, this vowel varies between open-mid front [ɛ], open-mid near-front [ɛ̠] and mid near-front [ɛ̝̈]. See Czech phonology
Danish Standard frisk [ˈfʁɛsk] 'fresh' Most often transcribed in IPA with æ. See Danish phonology
Dutch Standard bed 'bed' See Dutch phonology
The Hague jij 'you' Corresponds to [ɛi] in standard Dutch.
English General American bed 'bed'
Northern England May be somewhat lowered.
Received Pronunciation Older RP speakers pronounce a closer vowel []. See English phonology
General Australian Realization of [e], particularly by younger speakers. See Australian English phonology
Scottish
Cockney fat [fɛt] 'fat'
Singaporean
New Zealand See New Zealand English phonology
Some Broad
South African speakers
Other speakers realize this vowel as [æ] or [a]. See South African English phonology
Belfast days [dɛːz] 'days' Pronounced [iə] in closed syllables; corresponds to [eɪ] in RP.
Zulu mate [mɛt] 'mate' Speakers exhibit a met-mate merger.
Faroese frekt [fɹɛʰkt] 'greedy' See Faroese phonology
French bête 'beast' See French phonology
Galician ferro [ˈfɛro̝] 'iron' See Galician phonology
Georgian დი/gedi [ɡɛdi] 'swan'
German Standard Bett 'bed' Also described as mid [ɛ̝]. See Standard German phonology
Franconian accent oder [ˈoːdɛ] 'or' Used instead of [ɐ]. See Standard German phonology
Coastal Northern accents
Swabian accent fett [fɛt] 'fat' Contrasts with the close-mid [e]. See Standard German phonology
Western Swiss accents See [z̥ɛː] 'lake' Close-mid [] in other accents; contrasts with the near-open [æː]. See Standard German phonology
Hindustani Hindi रहना [ˈɾɛɦna] 'to stay' See Hindustani phonology
Urdu رہنا
Hungarian lesz [ˈlɛs] 'will be' Allophone of [æ].
Italian bene 'good' See Italian phonology
Kaingang mbre [ˈᵐbɾɛ] 'with'
Korean 매미 / maemi [mɛːmi] 'cicada' See Korean phonology
Kurdish Kurmanji (Northern) hevde [hɛvdɛ] 'seventeen' See Kurdish phonology
Sorani (Central) هه‌ڤده/hevde [hɛvdæ]
Pehlewî (Southern) [hɛvdæ]
Limburgish crème [kʀ̝ɛːm] 'cream' The example word is from the Maastrichtian dialect.
Lithuanian mesti [mɛs̪t̪ɪ] 'throw' See Lithuanian phonology
Lower Sorbian serp [s̪ɛrp] 'sickle'
Luxembourgish Stär [ʃtɛːɐ̯] 'star' Allophone of /eː/ before /ʀ/. See Luxembourgish phonology
Macedonian Standard мед/med [ˈmɛd̪] 'honey' See Macedonian language § Vowels
Malay Standard paling [pälɛŋ] 'to play' Possible realisation of /i/ and /e/ in closed final syllables. See Malay phonology
Negeri Sembilan cepat [cɔpɛɁ] 'quick' See Negeri Sembilan Malay
Kelatan-Pattani ayam [äjɛː] 'chicken' See Kelatan-Pattani
Terengganu biasa [bɛsə] 'normal' See Terengganu Malay
Perak mata [matɛ] 'eye' See Perak Malay
Norman Jersey affaûrder [afɔrˈdɛ] 'to afford'
Norwegian Sognamål pest [pʰɛst] 'plague' See Norwegian phonology
Occitan grèga [ˈɣɾɛɣɔ] 'Greek' See Occitan phonology
Polish ten 'this one' (nom. m.) See Polish phonology
Portuguese Most dialects pé [ˈpɛ] 'foot' Stressed vowel might be lower [æ]. The presence and use of other unstressed ⟨e⟩ allophones, such as [ e ɪ i ɨ], varies according to dialect.
Some speakers tempo [ˈt̪ɛ̃mpu] 'time' Timbre differences for nasalized vowels are mainly kept in European Portuguese. See Portuguese phonology
Romanian Transylvanian dialects vede [ˈvɛɟe] '(he) sees' Corresponds to mid [] in standard Romanian. See Romanian phonology
Russian это/eto 'this' See Russian phonology
Shiwiar [example needed] Allophone of /a/.
Slovene met [mɛ́t] 'throw' (n.) See Slovene phonology
Spanish Eastern Andalusian las madres [læ̞ː ˈmæ̞ːð̞ɾɛː] 'the mothers' Corresponds to [] in other dialects, but in these dialects they are distinct. See Spanish phonology
Murcian
Swahili shule [ʃulɛ] 'school'
Swedish Central Standard ät [ɛ̠ːt̪] 'eat' (imp.) Somewhat retracted. See Swedish phonology
Tagalog peke [ˈpɛxɛʔ] 'fake' See Tagalog phonology
Telugu చే [tʃɛːa] 'Fish'
మే [mɛːka] 'Goat'
Thai ตร / trae [trɛː˧] 'horn (instrument)'
Turkish ülke [y̠l̠ˈcɛ] 'country' Allophone of /e/ described variously as "word-final" and "occurring in final open syllable of a phrase". See Turkish phonology
Ukrainian день/den' [dɛnʲ] 'day' See Ukrainian phonology
Upper Sorbian čelo [ˈt͡ʃɛlɔ] 'calf'
Welsh nesaf [nɛsav] 'next' See Welsh phonology
West Frisian beppe [ˈbɛpə] 'grandma' See West Frisian phonology
Yoruba sẹ̀ [ɛ̄sɛ] 'leg'

See also

Notes

Tags:

Open-Mid Front Unrounded Vowel FeaturesOpen-Mid Front Unrounded Vowel OccurrenceOpen-Mid Front Unrounded VowelEpsilonInternational Phonetic AlphabetLanguageSpeech communicationVowelƐ

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