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Re: Writing glottalized consonants in IPA

From:Paul Bennett <paul-bennett@...>
Date:Friday, January 2, 2004, 2:15
On Thu, 01 Jan 2004 19:55:08 -0500, Robert Jung <RobertMJung@...>
wrote:

> How does one write, for example, glottalized /k/ (usually <k'>) in IPA? > > --Robert >
Hm. Here's my guess... If and only if your language distinguishes some kind of glottalisation from ejectiveness, you could use the "glottalic" diacritic, U+02C0. I'm not in "Unicode Mode" right now, since it seems to cause problems for so many of you, but the glyph looks like a superscript "glottal stop" sign. In typeset text, I suppose you could actually use a superscript glottal stop. If you don't need to distinguish glottalisation from ejectiveness, I'd use the ordinary "curly apostrophe" character normally used for ejectives, one of U+02BC or U+2019 (or U+0027 in a pinch), depending on whether you feel your readers are more likely to have one or the other in their usual font(s). Paul

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Mark J. Reed <markjreed@...>