Open-mid front unrounded vowel
In-game article clicks load inline without leaving the challenge.
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Close | i y | ɨ ʉ | ɯ u |
| Near-close | ɪ ʏ | ʊ | |
| Close-mid | e ø | ɘ ɵ | ɤ o |
| Mid | e̞ ø̞ | ə | ɤ̞ o̞ |
| Open-mid | ɛ œ | ɜ ɞ | ʌ ɔ |
| Near-open | æ | ɐ | |
| Open | a ɶ | ä | ɑ ɒ |
- IPA help
- IPA vowel chart with audio audio
- full chart
- template
Legend: unrounded • rounded
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 the Latin epsilon, a Latinized variant of the Greek lowercase epsilon, ⟨ɛ⟩.
Features
- Its vowel height is open-mid, also known as low-mid, which means the tongue is positioned halfway between an open vowel (a low vowel) and a mid vowel.
- Its vowel backness is front, which means the tongue is positioned forward in the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant.
- It is unrounded, which means that the lips are not rounded.
- Sagittal section of a vocal tract pronouncing the IPA sound ⟨ɛ⟩. Note that a wavy glottis in this diagram indicates a voiced sound.
- Spectrogram of [ɛ]
Occurrence
| Language | Word | IPA | Meaning | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akan (Twi) | ɛyɛ | [ɛjɛ] | 'it is good/fine' | See Akan phonology | |
| Arabic | Quranic | اَتٰىهُمْ/atāhum | [atɛːhum] | 'he came to them' | /aː/ in Modern Standard Arabic. See Arabic phonology |
| Armenian | Eastern | էջ/ēj | [ɛd͡ʒ] | 'page' | |
| Bavarian | Amstetten dialect | [example needed] | Typically transcribed in IPA with ⟨æ⟩. | ||
| Bengali | ব্যাঙ/bêṅ | [bɛŋ] | 'frog' | Also pronounced as /æ/. See Bengali phonology | |
| Breton | gwenn | [ˈɡwɛnː] | 'white' | ||
| Bulgarian | пет/pet | [pɛt̪] | 'five' | See Bulgarian phonology | |
| Catalan | set | [ˈsɛt] | 'seven' | See Catalan phonology | |
| Chinese | Mandarin | 天 / tiān | ⓘ | 'sky' | Height varies between mid and open depending on the speaker. See Standard Chinese phonology |
| Chuvash | ҫепĕҫ | [ˈɕɛp̬ɘɕ] | '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 [e̞]. See English phonology | ||||
| Younger General Australian speakers | Realization of /e/ due to an ongoing short-front vowel chain shift. See Australian English phonology | ||||
| Scottish | |||||
| Cockney | fat | [fɛt] | 'fat' | ||
| Singaporean | |||||
| New Zealand | See New Zealand English phonology | ||||
| Broad Australian | Realization of /æ/. General Australian speakers realize this vowel as [æ] or [a]. See Australian 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 the met–mate merger. | |
| Faroese | frekt | [fɹɛʰkt] | 'greedy' | See Faroese phonology | |
| French | bête | ⓘ | 'beast' | See French phonology | |
| Galician | ferro | [ˈfɛro̝] | 'iron' | See Galician phonology | |
| Georgian | გედი/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 [eː] in other accents; contrasts with the near-open [æː]. See Standard German phonology | |
| Hebrew | Tiberian | אֶרֶץ / ʾereṣ | [ˈʔɛrɛsˤ] | 'land' | /e̞/ in Modern Israeli Hebrew. See Tiberian Hebrew phonology and Modern Hebrew phonology |
| Hindustani | Hindi–Urdu | ख़ैरियत–خیریت / khairiyat | [xɛːɾɪjət̪] | 'well-being' | See Hindustani phonology. |
| Hungarian | lesz | [ˈlɛsː] | 'will be' | Allophone of [æ]. | |
| Italian | bene | ⓘ | 'good' | See Italian phonology | |
| Kaingang | mbre | [ˈᵐbɾɛ] | 'with' | ||
| Korean | 매미 / maemi | [mɛːmi] | 'cicada' | Merged with /e/ for many speakers. 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] | 'most' | Possible realisation of /i/ and /e/ in closed final syllables. See Malay phonology |
| Negeri Sembilan | cepat | [cɔpɛʔ] | 'quick' | See Negeri Sembilan Malay | |
| karpet | [käpɛʔ] | 'carpet' | |||
| Kelatan-Pattani | ayam | [äjɛː] | 'chicken' | See Kelatan-Pattani | |
| Terengganu | biasa | [bɛsə] | 'normal' | See Terengganu Malay | |
| Perak | mata | [matɛ] | 'eye' | See Perak Malay | |
| kero | [kɛro̞] | 'crab' | |||
| 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 [e̞eɪiɨ], 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 [e̞] 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 | [læ̞ːˈmæ̞ːð̞ɾɛː] | 'the mothers' | Corresponds to [e̞] 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 | చేప | [tʃɛːa] | 'Fish' | ||
| మేక | [mɛːka] | 'Goat' | |||
| Thai | แตร / trae | [trɛː˧] | 'horn (instrument)' | ||
| Turkish | ülke | [y̠l̠ˈkɛ] | '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 | |
| Yiddish | אלול / elel | [ˈɛləl] | 'Elul' | See Yiddish phonology | |
| Yoruba | ẹsẹ̀ | [ɛ̄sɛ] | 'leg' |
See also
Notes
External links
- on PHOIBLE