-
Aitysh (Kyrgyz: Айтыш [ɑjˈtɯɕ]; Kazakh: Айтыс /
Aitys [ɑjˈtəs]) is the name for the
primarily folk-oriented, oral
tradition of
improvised singing and...
- see also
Vietnamese phonology):
Ằ ằ,
Ắ ắ,
Ẳ ẳ,
Ẵ ẵ,
Ặ ặ. The
sound represented in pre-1972
Malaysian orthography by
ă is
a vowel. It
occurred in the final...
-
French preposition à and has
evolved into the at sign (@). Sometimes, it is part of
a surname:
Thomas à Kempis, Mary Anne
à Beckett.
À is used in Emilian...
-
Chinese pinyin á is the yángpíng tone (陽平/阳平 "high-rising tone") of "
a".
Á is the 2nd
letter of the
Czech language and
represents the
sound /
aː/.
Á is the 2nd...
-
pronounced as
nasalized open
front unrounded vowel ([
ã]). In Aromanian, it is
pronounced as mid-central
vowel ([
ə]) or
close central unrounded vowel ([ɨ]). In...
-
Ȧ (minuscule:
ȧ) is
a letter of the
Latin alphabet,
derived from
A with the
addition of
a dot
above the letter. It is
occasionally used as
a phonetic symbol...
- (Scandinavian ål, hår). Historically, the
å derives from the Old
Norse long /
aː/
vowel (spelled with the
letter á), but over time, it
developed into an [ɔː]...
-
â:
Ầ ầ Ẩ ẩ Ẫ ẫ Ấ ấ Ậ ậ In Welsh,
â is used to
represent long
stressed a [
aː] when,
without the cir****flex, the
vowel would be
pronounced as
short [
a]...
-
Phonetic Alphabet, it
represents the open
central unrounded vowel. The
letter Ä occurs as an
independent letter in the Swedish, German, Luxembourgish, North...
-
Ā,
lowercase ā ("
A with macron"), is
a grapheme,
a Latin A with
a macron, used in
several orthographies.
Ā is used to
denote a long
A.
Examples are the...