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Front rounded vowel: Difference between revisions

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The front rounded vowels defined by the IPA include:
The front rounded vowels defined by the IPA include:
* {{IPA|[y]}}, a [[close front rounded vowel]] (or "high front rounded vowel")
* {{IPA|[y]}}, a [[close front rounded vowel]] (or "high front rounded vowel")
* {{IPA|[ʏ]}}, a [[near-close near-front rounded vowel]] (or "near-high ...")
* {{IPA|[ʏ]}}, a [[near-close front rounded vowel]] (or "near-high ...")
* {{IPA|[ø]}}, a [[close-mid front rounded vowel]] (or "high-mid ...")
* {{IPA|[ø]}}, a [[close-mid front rounded vowel]] (or "high-mid ...")
* {{IPA|[ø̞]}}, a [[mid front rounded vowel]]
* {{IPA|[ø̞]}}, a [[mid front rounded vowel]]

Revision as of 08:37, 22 May 2018

A front rounded vowel is a particular type of vowel that is both front and rounded.

The front rounded vowels defined by the IPA include:

Front rounded vowels are cross-linguistically relatively uncommon, but occur in a number of well-known languages, including French, German, Turkish and Chinese.

The high vowel [y] is the most common, while the low vowel [ɶ] is extremely rare. This is consistent with the general correlation between rounding and vowel height.

Language families in which front-rounded vowels are common are: