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Vowel

A vowel is a sound in spoken language (or a letter of the alphabet denoting such a sound) that has a sounding voice (vocal sound) of its own. Unlike a non-vowel (consonant), a vowel can be sounded on its own. A single vowel sound forms the basis of a syllable, although two adjacent vowel sounds can be blended together into a single syllable diphthong.

For those languages which use some form of the Roman alphabet, such as English, certain letters are identified as vowels because they are normally associated with vowel sounds. In the English language, the vowel letters are A , E , I, O , U and sometimes Y. In English, the letter W by itself is not usually a vowel, but can form a diphthong with the vowels A, E, or O, and can serve as a vowel in a few Welsh-derived words like cwm and crwth. In old English V was used interchangably with u and j was used interchangably with i (particular in Roman numerals, e.g. vij).

There is necessarily not a direct one-to-one correspondence between the vowel sounds of a language and the vowel letters. Many languages that use a form of the Roman alphabet have more vowel sounds than can be represented by the standard vowel letters. In the case of English, the five primary vowel letters can represent both long and short vowel sounds (some of the long vowel sounds in English are actually diphthongs). Furthermore, in English some vowel sounds are represented by combinations of vowel letters, such as the ea in beat or the ou in such words as through or thought. Note that the consonants gh in these words are not part of the vowel sequence. While always silent in Standard English, they may be pronounced in other English dialects.

Other languages also attempt to overcome the limitation in the number of Roman vowel letters in similar ways. Many languages, like English, make extensive use of combinations of vowel letters to represent various sounds. However, it is also very common for languages to add diacritical marks to vowels, such as accents or umlauts, to represent the variety of possible vowel sounds. Some languages have also constructed additional vowels that are based on the standard Roman vowels, such as æ or ø that are found in some of the Scandinavian languages.

Vowels support the neighbouring consonants, but often bear little information themselves (cn y rd ths?). This is especially true of some Afro-Asiatic languages, where vowels carry mostly inflections and create few minimal pairs that would get in the way of understanding. Because of this, some alphabets (called abjads) do not represent vowels at all.

The most common vowel system, in both natural languages and constructed languages, is this one:

u     i
 o   e
   a

The reason for this seems to be that it makes the most efficient use of phonological space. Latin and Ancient Greek had this vowel system, It is for this reason that the Cyrillic, Greek and Latin alphabets have five vowel letters.

Languages can make several distinctions (contrasts) on vowels:

  • Height and Frontness. This is illustrated by the above triangle. u and o are back, a is central and low, i and e are front. i and u are high. In languages with four steps the height order is high, open, closed, low. In three vowel systems, either {i, a, u} or {e, a, o} are the vowels. All languages have at least two vowels; the Tshwizhyi dialect of Abkhaz contrasts only /a/ and /i/, with significant allophony.¹ A few languages, such as Navajo, have four-vowel systems that lack either i or u, but there is no known natural language without a.

  • Roundedness is simply whether the lips are rounded, or not. Simply having a rounded vowel is not using this contrast because it must also have an unrounded version of the same vowel. French and German use roundedness as a contrast. Half rounded vowels are also possible, as in Swedish.

  • Length is how long the vowel is said. Japanese and Latin use this contrast. Modern English does not use this contrast. Estonian has short, half-long, and long vowels. Long vowels are usually written in the IPA with a colon: For some reason, in the Germanic languages, long vowels tend to be very unstable.

  • Nasalization has air going through the nose. French uses this contrast.

  • Tenseness is the amount of energy expended in producing the vowel, so that tense vowels have higher formants and generally greater tongue involvement in the production of the sound that their lax counterparts. English uses this obscure contrast: leap, poot are the tense version of lip, putt, which are called lax.

  • Voicing describes whether a vowel is fully spoken or whispered. Several Native American languages, such as Cheyenne and Totonac[?], contrast voiced and devoiced vowels. English vowels are de-voiced in whispered speech, and in Japanese, vowels that are low pitched and between voiceless consonants are de-voiced.

  • Creaky voice, breathy voice, and murmured voice can also be used contrastively. Often, these co-occur with tones or stress patterns; in the Mon language, vowels pronounced in "high tone" are also given a creaky voicing. In such contexts, it can be unclear whether it is the tone, the voicing type, or the pairing of the two that is being used for phonemic contrast.

  • Retracted tongue root is also used in African languages. This rare contrast is difficult for Europeans to perceive, but is used extensively in Maasai[?] and other East African languages.

Daniel Jones developed a system to describe vowels.

¹ Some linguists claim that it is possible to posit only one vowel in some Abkhaz dialects, though the general consensus seems to be that that is stretching things a bit.



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