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  2. Grave and acute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grave_and_acute

    The grave/acute distinction has lost its relevance in modern phonetics, but it may still be relevant to other disciplines. The distinction dates from relatively early in the days of acoustic phonetics, at a time that some phonologists believed that one could categorize all speech sounds by a finite set of acoustically-defined distinctive features, which were supposed to correspond to auditory ...

  3. English terms with diacritical marks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_terms_with...

    the acute accent (née) and grave accent (English poetry marking, changèd), modifying vowels or marking stresses; the circumflex (entrepôt), borrowed from French; the diaeresis (Zoë), indicating a second syllable in two consecutive vowels; the tittle, the dot found on the regular small i and small j, is removed when another diacritic is required

  4. Grave accent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grave_accent

    The alternative to the grave accent in Mandarin is the numeral 4 after the syllable: pà = pa4. In African languages and in International Phonetic Alphabet, the grave accent often indicates a low tone: Nobiin jàkkàr ('fishhook'), Yoruba àgbọ̀n ('chin'), Hausa màcè ('woman'). The grave accent represents the low tone in Kanien'kéha or ...

  5. Greek diacritics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_diacritics

    Diacritics are written above lower-case letters and at the upper left of capital letters. In the case of a digraph, the second vowel takes the diacritics. A breathing diacritic is written to the left of an acute or grave accent but below a circumflex. Accents are written above a diaeresis or between its two dots.

  6. Acute accent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_accent

    [5] [6] The other vowels (i and u) only appear either without an accent or with a grave. Since the 1980s the SQA (which sets school standards and thus the de facto standard language) and most publishers have abandoned the acute accent, using grave accents in all situations (analogous to the use of the acute in Irish). However, universities ...

  7. Diacritic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diacritic

    The grave (accent grave) marks the sound /ɛ/ when over an e, as in père ("father") or is used to distinguish words that are otherwise homographs such as a/à ("has"/"to") or ou/où ("or"/"where"). The acute (accent aigu) is only used in "é", modifying the "e" to make the sound /e/, as in étoile ("star").

  8. Play Just Words Online for Free - AOL.com

    www.aol.com/games/play/masque-publishing/just-words

    If you love Scrabble, you'll love the wonderful word game fun of Just Words. Play Just Words free online!

  9. Homophony (writing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homophony_(writing)

    Heise comments: “In transliterations the same sounds that are represented by different cuneiform signs are distinguished with an accent or an index. The signs for ni, ní (i with accent aigu), nì (i with accent grave), ni4, ni5, ... are all different cuneiform symbols. ní may be called (and pronounced among Assyriologists) ni2 and nì as ni3.