Ə

Ə, or ə, also called schwa, is an additional letter of the Latin alphabet. In the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), minuscule ə is used to represent the mid central vowel or a schwa.

Schwa
Ə ə
Usage
Writing systemLatin script
Typealphabetic
Phonetic usage[æ]
[ə]
[ɨ]
Unicode codepointU+018F, U+0259
History
Development
Time period~1922 to 1939, 1992 to present
Descendants  Ә
Other
Writing directionLeft-to-Right

It was invented by Johann Andreas Schmeller for the reduced vowel at the end of some German words and first used in his 1820s works on the Bavarian dialects.

Usage

It is or was used in several languages around the world, including the Azerbaijani, Gottscheerish, Karay·a and Adyghe languages, and Abenaki language of Quebec, and in the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ dialect of Halkomelem. Both the majuscule and minuscule forms of this letter are based on the form of a turned e, while the Pan-Nigerian alphabet pairs the same lowercase letter with Ǝ.

A superscript minuscule is used to modify the preceding consonant to have a mid central vowel release, though it is also commonly used to indicate possible syllabicity of the following sonorant, especially in transcriptions of English. The latter usage is non-standard.

In the Azerbaijani alphabet, Ə represents the near-open front unrounded vowel, /æ/. The letter was used in the 1992 Chechen Latin alphabet proposal where it represented the glottal stop, /ʔ/. It was also used in the Uniform Turkic Alphabet, for example in Janalif for the Tatar language in the 1920s–1930s. Also, in a romanization of Pashto, the letter Ə is used to represent [ə]. When some Roman orthographies in the Soviet Union were converted to use the Cyrillic script in the 1930s and 1940s, this letter has been adopted verbatim.

In the Karay·a alphabet, the letter represents /ə/.

In the Latin transliteration of Avestan, the corresponding long vowel is written as schwa-macron, Ə̄ ə̄.

An R-colored vowel can be represented using ɚ.

A schwa with a retroflex hook () is used in phonetic transcription.[1]

For gender neutrality in Italian

The schwa has recently also seen increased use in the Italian language, replacing the gendered suffixes of the language, in order to keep words gender neutral.[2] For example, the use of the schwa in the word “tuttə” (all/everyone), as opposed to “tutti” (all/everyone, masculine plural). This usage is controversial, with president of the Accademia della Crusca opposing its use.[3] The Accademia della Crusca replied to an initiative by the Equal Opportunities Committee of the Supreme Court of Cassation for the introduction of the schwa in juridical language stating that "juridical language is not the place to experiment with minority-led innovations that would lead to irregularity and idiolects."[4]

Unicode encodings

Character information
PreviewƏə
Unicode name LATIN CAPITAL LETTER SCHWA LATIN SMALL LETTER SCHWA MODIFIER LETTER SMALL SCHWA LATIN SUBSCRIPT SMALL LETTER SCHWA
Encodingsdecimalhexdechexdechexdechex
Unicode399U+018F601U+02597498U+1D4A8340U+2094
UTF-8198 143C6 8F201 153C9 99225 181 138E1 B5 8A226 130 148E2 82 94
Numeric character referenceƏƏəəᵊᵊₔₔ

Since the legacy fixed 8-bit ISO/IEC Turkish encoding contains neither Ə nor ə, Ä ä has sometimes been used for the Azerbaijani language instead, as in the Tatar and Turkmen languages.

In Windows, the characters can be generated by holding the ⎇ Alt key and pressing the respective decimal Unicode number, which can be found in the table (e.g. 399, 601), on the number pad preceded by a leading 0. With a Linux compose key, the lowercase letter is by default generated by Compose+e+e.

References

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