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 back unrounded vowel, or low back 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 ⟨ɑ⟩. The letter ⟨ɑ⟩ is called script a or handwritten a because it lacks the extra hook on top of a printed letter a, which corresponds to a different vowel, the open front unrounded vowel. Script a, which has a full length linear stroke on its right, should not be confused with turned script a, ⟨ɒ⟩, which has the linear stroke on its left and corresponds to a rounded version of this vowel, the open back rounded vowel.

The open back unrounded vowel is the vocalic equivalent of the pharyngeal approximant [ʕ̞].

Features

  • Its vowel height is open, also known as low, which means the tongue is positioned far from the roof of the mouth – that is, low in the mouth.
  • Its vowel backness is back, which means the tongue is positioned back in the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant. Unrounded back vowels tend to be centralized, which means that often they are in fact near-back.
  • Its place of articulation is pharyngeal, which means it is articulated with the tongue root against the back of the throat (the pharynx).
  • It is unrounded, which means that the lips are not rounded.

Occurrence

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
AfrikaansStandarddaar'there'The quality varies between open near-back unrounded [ɑ̟ː], open back unrounded [ɑː] and even open back rounded [ɒː]. See Afrikaans phonology
Äiwookânongä[kɑnoŋæ]'I want'
ArabicStandardطويل (awīl)'tall'Allophone of long and short /a/ near emphatic consonants, depending on the speaker's accent. See Arabic phonology
Essaouiraقال (qāl)[qɑːl]'he said'One of the possible realisations of /ā/.
ArmenianEasternհաց (hacʿ)[hɑt͡sʰ]'bread'
Bashkirҡаҙ (qađ)'goose'
CatalanMany dialectspal[ˈpɑɫ]'stick'Allophone of /a/ in contact with velar consonants. See Catalan phonology
Some dialectsmà[ˈmɑ]'hand'More central ([ä] or [ɐ̞]) in other dialects; fully front [a] in Majorcan Catalan. See Catalan phonology
Majorcan and Valencian (some speakers)lloc[ˈʎ̟ɑk]'place'Unrounded allophone of /ɔ/ in some accents. It can be centralized. See Catalan phonology
Southern Valencianbou[ˈbɑw]'bull'Pronunciation of the vowel /ɔ/ before [w]. It can be centralized. See Catalan phonology
ChineseMandarin (bàng)'stick'Allophone of /a/ before /ŋ/. See Standard Chinese phonology
DutchStandardbad'bath'Backness varies among dialects; in the Standard Northern accent it is fully back. In the Standard Belgian accent it is raised and fronted to [ɑ̝̈]. See Dutch phonology
Amsterdamaap[ɑːp]'monkey'Corresponds to [~äː] in standard Dutch.
Antwerp
Utrecht
The Haguenauw[nɑː]'narrow'Corresponds to [ʌu] in standard Dutch.
EnglishGeneral Americanon[ɑn]'on'May be more front [ɑ̟ ~ ä], especially in accents without the cot-caught merger.[clarification needed] See English phonology
Cockneypalm[pɑːm]'palm'Fully back. It can be more front [ɑ̟ː] instead.
General South AfricanFully back. Broad varieties usually produce a rounded vowel [ɒː ~ ɔː] instead, while Cultivated SAE prefers a more front vowel [ɑ̟ː~äː]. See South African English phonology
Cultivated South African[pɑ̟ːm]Typically more front than cardinal [ɑ]. It may be as front as [äː] in some Cultivated South African and southern English speakers. See English phonology and South African English phonology
Received Pronunciation
Non-local Dublinback[bɑq]'back'Allophone of /a/ before velars for some speakers.
FaroeseSome dialectsvátur[ˈvɑːtʊɹ]'wet'Corresponds to /ɔɑ/ in standard language. See Faroese phonology
FrenchConservative Parisianpas[pɑ]'not'Contrasts with /a/, but many speakers have only one open vowel [ä]. See French phonology
Quebecpâte'paste'Contrasts with /a/. See Quebec French phonology
Galicianirmán[iɾˈmɑŋ]'brother'Allophone of /a/ in contact with velar consonants. See Galician phonology
Georgianგუდ (guda)[k̬ud̪ɑ]'leather bag'Usually not fully back [ɑ], typically [ɑ̟] to [ä]. Sometimes transcribed as /a/.
GermanStandardGourmand[ɡ̊ʊʁˈmɑ̃ː]'gourmand'Nasalized; often realized as rounded [ɒ̃ː]. See Standard German phonology
Many speakersnah[nɑː]'near'Used by speakers in Northern Germany, East Central Germany, Franconia and Switzerland. Also a part of the Standard Austrian accent. More front in other accents. See Standard German phonology
GreekSfakianμπύρα (býra)[ˈbirɑ]"beer"Corresponds to central [ä~ɐ] in Modern Standard Greek. See Modern Greek phonology
HindustaniHindiख़ास/khas'special'Allophone of [ ~ ä]. More likely to be heard in serious speech or poetry. See Hindustani phonology.
Urduخاص/khas
HungarianSome dialectsmagyar[ˈmɑɟɑr]'Hungarian'Weakly rounded [ɒ] in standard Hungarian. See Hungarian phonology
InuitWest Greenlandicoqarpoq[ɔˈqɑpːɔq̚]'he says'Allophone of /a/ before and especially between uvulars. See Inuit phonology
ItalianSome Piedmont dialectscasa[ˈkɑːzɑ]'house'Allophone of /a/ which in Italian is largely realised as central [ä].
IrishMunster Dialectáit[ɑːtʲ]'place'See Irish phonology
Kaingangga[ᵑɡɑ]'land, soil'Varies between back [ɑ] and central [ɐ].
Khmerស្ករ (skâr)[skɑː]'sugar'See Khmer phonology
Low Germanal / aal[ɑːl]'all'Backness may vary among dialects.
MalayKedahmata[ma.tɑ]'eye'See Malay phonology
Kelantan-PattaniAllophone of syllable-final /a/ in open-ended words and before /k/ and /h/ codas. See Kelantan-Pattani Malay
Standardqari[qɑ.ri]'qari'Found only in certain Arabic loanwords and used by speakers who know Arabic. Normally replaced by [ä]. See Malay phonology
Norwegianhat[hɑːt]'hate'The example word is from Urban East Norwegian. Central [äː] in some other dialects. See Norwegian phonology
PortugueseSome Azorean dialectsnada[ˈnɑðɐ]'nothing'See Portuguese phonology
Paulistavegetal[veʒeˈtɑw]'vegetable'Only immediately before [w].
Russianпалка (palka)[ˈpɑɫkə]'stick'Occurs only before the hard /l/, but not when a palatalized consonant precedes. See Russian phonology
Scottish GaelicLewisbalach[ˈpɑl̪ˠəx]'boy'Allophone of [a] in proximity to broad sonorants.
Semaamqa[à̠mqɑ̀]'lower back'Possible realization of /a/ after uvular stops.
SwedishSome dialectsjag[jɑːɡ]'I'Weakly rounded [ɒ̜ː] in Central Standard Swedish. See Swedish phonology
Turkishat'horse'Also described as central [ä]. See Turkish phonology
Ukrainianмати (maty)[ˈmɑtɪ]'mother'See Ukrainian phonology
VietnameseSome dialects in North Central and Centralgà[ɣɑ˨˩]'chicken'See Vietnamese phonology
West FrisianStandardlang[ɫɑŋ]'long'Also described as central [ä]. See West Frisian phonology
Aasterskmaat[mɑːt]'mate'Contrasts with a front //. See West Frisian phonology

Near-open back unrounded vowel

In some languages (such as Azerbaijani, Estonian, Luxembourgish and Toda) there is the near-open back unrounded vowel (a sound between cardinal ⟨ɑ⟩ and ⟨ʌ⟩), which can be transcribed in IPA with [ɑ̝] or [ʌ̞].

Features

  • Its vowel height is near-open, also known as near-low, which means the tongue is positioned similarly to an open vowel, but is slightly more constricted – that is, the tongue is positioned similarly to a low vowel, but slightly higher.
  • Its vowel backness is back, which means the tongue is positioned back in the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant. Unrounded back vowels tend to be centralized, which means that often they are in fact near-back.
  • Its place of articulation is pharyngeal, which means it is articulated with the tongue root against the back of the throat (the pharynx).
  • It is unrounded, which means that the lips are not rounded.

Occurrence

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Azerbaijaniqardaş[ɡɑ̝ɾˈd̪ɑ̝ʃ]'brother'Near-open.
DutchLeidenbad[bɑ̝t]'bath'Near-open fully back; can be rounded [ɒ̝] instead. See Dutch phonology
Rotterdam
EnglishCardiffhot[hɑ̽t]'hot'Somewhat raised and fronted.
Norfolk
Estonianvale[ˈvɑ̝le̞ˑ]'lie'Near-open. See Estonian phonology
Finnishkana'hen'Near-open, also described as open central [ä]. See Finnish phonology
Kazakhalma[ɑ̝ɫ̪ˈmɑ̝]'apple'Can be realised as near-open.[citation needed]
LimburgishMaastrichtianbats[bɑ̽ts]'buttock'The quality varies between open back [ɑ], open near-back [ɑ̟], and near-open near-back [ɑ̽], depending on the dialect.
LuxembourgishKapp[kʰɑ̝p]'head'Near-open fully back. See Luxembourgish phonology
Toda[ɑ̝ːn]'elephant'Near-open.

See also

Notes

External links