Need help identifying accent symbol

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  • #42570
    Kyle Vladetich
    Participant

    Hello,

    I need help identifying what the curved foreign language symbol is above the double o.  It looks like a circumflex, but this is too curved. Thank you.

    #42571
    Donald Winiecki
    Moderator

    Hi Kyle!

    It is tricky to try an answer without knowing exactly what you have. I see you tried to upload an example for us. However, it looks like the upload file was too large for the system.

    Could you reduce the size of your example and retry the upload for us?

    #42572
    Kyle Vladetich
    Participant

    Second attempt at uploading photo

    Attachments:
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    #42574
    Donald Winiecki
    Moderator

    What language is this?

    #42575
    Kyle Vladetich
    Participant

    It's English/UEB. The specific section is a pronunciation key in the back of a vocabulary builder book.

    #42576
    Donald Winiecki
    Moderator

    As you say this English, and because we can say that the symbols are not currently included in the UEB symbol set, a transcriber-defined symbol (Rules of UEB 3.26) will perhaps be the most economical way of representing this.

    The transcriber-defined symbol should be included in the SPECIAL SYMBOLS list if it is used frequently in the materials you are transcribing. If it is used only a few times, a transcriber's note placed immediately preceding its use in text will be appropriate. Follow 3.2.2 in Braille Formats if the latter type of transcriber's note is used.

    All of the above considered, because the symbol is found in a pronunciation key in the book, it is also possible that what you have encountered is a particular way of representing the "top tie bar" in the international phonetic alphabet (IPA). The IPA symbol for the top tie bar across two letters is a dot 5 placed unspaced between the tied letters. Its use is displayed on page 22 of the IPA guidebook: https://iceb.org/IPA-braille_print-ed_final.pdf

    You may also want to check with the UEB Skills Group for other options.

    We hope this helps!

    #42579
    Anna
    Moderator

    This looks to me like a ligature - I've seen it come up in pronunciation sections before, although print texts may vary in exactly how it looks.  I've seen ligatures shown before as a line connecting two letters, or as the two letters pushed together so the lines are touching (as in "Cœur").  In pronunciation, a ligature indicates that the two letters make one combined sound.

    Ligatures are covered in UEB 4.3: the ligature indicator (dots 45, 235) is brailled in between the two letters ligatured in print.

Viewing 7 posts - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)

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