Diacritic
Characters, Uses, History, & Facts
diacritic, a mark near or through an alphabetic character to represent a pronunciation different from that of the unmarked character.
Diacritics are often used to represent sounds (whether phonemes or other phonetic units) unavailable in an existing script. For example, the modern alphabets of the western European nations were, strictly speaking, adaptations of the Latin alphabet, and, as such, they required a means of representing sounds that do not occur in Latin. The difficulty of representing the new sounds was addressed differently in various alphabets. In some cases, combinations of two or more letters were introduced to represent the new sounds. For instance, the sound sh as in English ash is represented in Polish by sz, in Dutch by sj, and in German by sch. Another common solution was to add diacritical marks, either above or under the letters, to their right or left, or inside them. To this group belong the German ä, ö, and ü; the Portuguese and French ç; the Spanish ñ and Portuguese ã and õ; the Italian à, é, è, ì, and ù; and so on; and a great variety in the Latin-Slavic alphabets (such as Polish, Czech, and Croatian), including a̦, e̦, č, ć, š, ś, ž, ż, and ź. The Latin-Turkish alphabet, introduced in 1928, became general throughout Turkey in 1930. It contains 29 letters, of which five are distinguished by diacritical marks: two vowels (ö and ü) and three consonants (ç, ğ, and ş). In one instance there is a distinction in reverse: the dot from i is eliminated (ı) to represent a new sound.
Diacritics offer several advantages over a combination of letters, including specificity and economy of space. For example, in English the letters s and h form the sound sh as in ash, but in such words as glasshouse there is no way to specify that the s and h should be pronounced separately. In such languages as French, a diaeresis over a vowel, as in naïf, overcomes this challenge.
For languages that were originally written without vowel letters, such as Arabic, Hebrew, and other Semitic languages, the use of diacritical marks was introduced. In the Arabic language, diacritics not only represent vowel sounds but also distinguish certain consonants from one another. The three diacritics that mark vowels are each written above or below the consonant preceding the vowel, while a sign called sukūn indicates the absence of a vowel.
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