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All of the 22 IPA supporting fonts in the page you linked do not display the (U+27E8) and (U+27E9) codes. This is not an IPA problem. I can see IPA perfectly fine, just not the obscure angle brackets. It's not a browser problem. It's not a font problem. The one thing that does occur to me after still further research is it may be an OS problem ...
IPA is probably handled by a different font, unless your main Latin font happens to be a huge one containing IPA (Arial Unicode MS, Gentium, or similar). This second font is apparently heavier. One way to fix it is to set the font for the IPA range to one that closer resembles your normal font (if Firefox has this option at all), another is to ...
The latest official IPA chart, revised in 2020. Here is a basic key to the symbols of the International Phonetic Alphabet. For the smaller set of symbols that is sufficient for English, see Help:IPA/English. Several rare IPA symbols are not included; these are found in the main IPA article or on the extensive IPA chart.
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If your browser does not display IPA symbols, you probably need to install a font that includes the IPA (for good, free IPA fonts, see the download links in the articles for Gentium, and the more complete Charis SIL; for a monospaced font, see the complete Everson Mono).
macOS provides a "character palette" with much the same functionality, along with searching by related characters, glyph tables in a font, etc. It can be enabled in the input menu in the menu bar under System Preferences → International → Input Menu (or System Preferences → Language and Text → Input Sources) or can be viewed under Edit ...
The non-IPA letters found in the extIPA are listed in the following table. VoQS letters may also be used, as in ↀ͡r̪͆ for a buccal interdental trill (a raspberry), as VoQS started off as a subset of extIPA. [3] Several letters and superscript forms were added to Unicode 14 and 15. They are included in the free Gentium Plus and Andika fonts.
Is not what the OP pointed at, is it? The bullet went wrong in the chart itself, if I read well here. Then, the new footnote is leaving the (famous & well-known) IPA-text, and not changing the problem. And longer. Not my choice. -DePiep 01:50, 5 September 2010 (UTC)::Ah, and the footnote is less correct in case there is no a full pair. And is ...