FrontCentralBack
Closei yɨ ʉɯ u
Near-closeɪ ʏʊ
Close-mide øɘ ɵɤ o
Mid ø̞əɤ̞
Open-midɛ œɜ ɞʌ ɔ
Near-openæɐ
Opena ɶäɑ ɒ

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

Occurrence

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Akan (Twi)ɛyɛ[ɛjɛ]'it is good/fine'See Akan phonology
ArabicQuranicاَتٰىهُمْ/atāhum[atɛːhum]'he came to them'/aː/ in Modern Standard Arabic. See Arabic phonology
ArmenianEasternէջ/ēj[ɛd͡ʒ]'page'
BavarianAmstetten dialect[example needed]Typically transcribed in IPA with ⟨æ⟩.
Bengaliব্যাঙ/bê[bɛŋ]'frog'Also pronounced as /æ/. See Bengali phonology
Bretongwenn[ˈɡwɛnː]'white'
Bulgarianпет/pet[pɛt̪]'five'See Bulgarian phonology
Catalanset[ˈsɛt]'seven'See Catalan phonology
ChineseMandarin / tiān'sky'Height varies between mid and open depending on the speaker. See Standard Chinese phonology
Chuvashҫепĕҫ[ˈɕɛp̬ɘɕ]'gentle, tender'
Czechled[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
DanishStandardfrisk[ˈfʁɛsk]'fresh'Most often transcribed in IPA with ⟨æ⟩. See Danish phonology
DutchStandardbed'bed'See Dutch phonology
The Haguejij'you'Corresponds to [ɛi] in standard Dutch.
EnglishGeneral Americanbed'bed'
Northern EnglandMay be somewhat lowered.
Received PronunciationOlder RP speakers pronounce a closer vowel []. See English phonology
Younger General Australian speakersRealization of /e/ due to an ongoing short-front vowel chain shift. See Australian English phonology
Scottish
Cockneyfat[fɛt]'fat'
Singaporean
New ZealandSee New Zealand English phonology
Broad AustralianRealization of /æ/. General Australian speakers realize this vowel as [æ] or [a]. See Australian English phonology
Some Broad South African speakersOther speakers realize this vowel as [æ] or [a]. See South African English phonology
Belfastdays[dɛːz]'days'Pronounced [iə] in closed syllables; corresponds to [eɪ] in RP.
Zulumate[mɛt]'mate'Speakers exhibit the metmate merger.
Faroesefrekt[fɹɛʰkt]'greedy'See Faroese phonology
Frenchbête'beast'See French phonology
Galicianferro[ˈfɛro̝]'iron'See Galician phonology
Georgianდი/gedi[ɡɛdi]'swan'
GermanStandardBett'bed'Also described as mid [ɛ̝]. See Standard German phonology
Franconian accentoder[ˈoːdɛ]'or'Used instead of [ɐ]. See Standard German phonology
Coastal Northern accents
Swabian accentfett[fɛt]'fat'Contrasts with the close-mid [e]. See Standard German phonology
Western Swiss accentsSee[z̥ɛː]'lake'Close-mid [] in other accents; contrasts with the near-open [æː]. See Standard German phonology
HebrewTiberianאֶרֶץ / ʾere[ˈʔɛrɛsˤ]'land'// in Modern Israeli Hebrew. See Tiberian Hebrew phonology and Modern Hebrew phonology
HindustaniHindiUrduख़ैरियतخیریت / khairiyat[xɛːɾɪjət̪]'well-being'See Hindustani phonology.
Hungarianlesz[ˈlɛsː]'will be'Allophone of [æ].
Italianbene'good'See Italian phonology
Kaingangmbre[ˈᵐbɾɛ]'with'
Korean매미 / maemi[mɛːmi]'cicada'Merged with /e/ for many speakers. See Korean phonology
KurdishKurmanji (Northern)hevde[hɛvdɛ]'seventeen'See Kurdish phonology
Sorani (Central)هه‌ڤده/hevde[hɛvdæ]
Pehlewî (Southern)[hɛvdæ]
Limburgishcrème[kʀ̝ɛːm]'cream'The example word is from the Maastrichtian dialect.
Lithuanianmesti[mɛs̪t̪ɪ]'throw'See Lithuanian phonology
Lower Sorbianserp[s̪ɛrp]'sickle'
LuxembourgishStär[ʃtɛːɐ̯]'star'Allophone of /eː/ before /ʀ/. See Luxembourgish phonology
MacedonianStandardмед/med[ˈmɛd̪]'honey'See Macedonian language § Vowels
MalayStandardpaling[pälɛŋ]'most'Possible realisation of /i/ and /e/ in closed final syllables. See Malay phonology
Negeri Sembilancepat[cɔpɛʔ]'quick'See Negeri Sembilan Malay
karpet[käpɛʔ]'carpet'
Kelatan-Pattaniayam[äjɛː]'chicken'See Kelatan-Pattani
Terengganubiasa[bɛsə]'normal'See Terengganu Malay
Perakmata[matɛ]'eye'See Perak Malay
kero[kɛro̞]'crab'
NormanJerseyaffaûrder[afɔrˈdɛ]'to afford'
NorwegianSognamålpest[pʰɛst]'plague'See Norwegian phonology
Occitangrèga[ˈɣɾɛɣɔ]'Greek'See Occitan phonology
Polishten'this one' (nom. m.)See Polish phonology
PortugueseMost dialectspé[ˈpɛ]'foot'Stressed vowel might be lower [æ]. The presence and use of other unstressed ⟨e⟩ allophones, such as [eɪiɨ], varies according to dialect.
Some speakerstempo[ˈt̪ɛ̃mpu]'time'Timbre differences for nasalized vowels are mainly kept in European Portuguese. See Portuguese phonology
RomanianTransylvanian dialectsvede[ˈvɛɟe]'(he) sees'Corresponds to mid [] in standard Romanian. See Romanian phonology
Russianэто/eto'this'See Russian phonology
Shiwiar[example needed]Allophone of /a/.
Slovenemet[mɛ́t]'throw' (n.)See Slovene phonology
SpanishEastern Andalusianlas madres[læ̞ːˈmæ̞ːð̞ɾɛː]'the mothers'Corresponds to [] in other dialects, but in these dialects they are distinct. See Spanish phonology
Murcian
Swahilishule[ʃulɛ]'school'
SwedishCentral Standardät[ɛ̠ːt̪]'eat' (imp.)Somewhat retracted. See Swedish phonology
Tagalogpeke[ˈpɛxɛʔ]'fake'See Tagalog phonology
Teluguచే[tʃɛːa]'Fish'
మే[mɛːka]'Goat'
Thaiตร / trae[trɛː˧]'horn (instrument)'
Turkishülke[y̠l̠ˈkɛ]'country'Allophone of /e/ described variously as "word-final" and "occurring in final open syllable of a phrase". See Turkish phonology
Ukrainianдень/den'[dɛnʲ]'day'See Ukrainian phonology
Upper Sorbiančelo[ˈt͡ʃɛlɔ]'calf'
Welshnesaf[nɛsav]'next'See Welsh phonology
West Frisianbeppe[ˈbɛpə]'grandma'See West Frisian phonology
Yiddishאלול / elel[ˈɛləl]'Elul'See Yiddish phonology
Yorubasẹ̀[ɛ̄sɛ]'leg'

See also

Notes

External links