Double acute accent

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox diacritic

The double acute accent (Template:Char) is a diacritic mark of the Latin and Cyrillic scripts. It is used primarily in Hungarian or Chuvash, and consequently it is sometimes referred to by typographers as hungarumlaut.<ref name=typophile2010>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The signs formed with a regular umlaut are letters in their own right in the Hungarian alphabet—for instance, they are separate letters for the purpose of collation. Letters with the double acute, however, are considered variants of their equivalents with the umlaut, being thought of as having both an umlaut and an acute accent.

UsesEdit

Vowel lengthEdit

HistoryEdit

Length marks first appeared in Hungarian orthography in the 15th-century Hussite Bible. Initially, only á and é were marked, since they are different in quality as well as length. Later í, ó, ú were marked as well.

In the 18th century, before Hungarian orthography became fixed, u and o with umlaut + acute (ǘ, ö́) were used in some printed documents.<ref name=AcuteExamples>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> 19th century typographers introduced the double acute as a more aesthetic solution.

HungarianEdit

In Hungarian, the double acute is thought of as the letter having both an umlaut and an acute accent. Standard Hungarian has 14 vowels in a symmetrical system: seven short vowels (a, e, i, o, ö, u, ü) and seven long ones, which are written with an acute accent in the case of á, é, í, ó, ú, and with the double acute in the case of ő, ű. Vowel length has phonemic significance in Hungarian, that is, it distinguishes different words and grammatical forms.

short a e i o ö u ü
long á é í ó ő ú ű

SlovakEdit

At the beginning of the 20th century, the letter (A with double acute) was used in Slovak as a long variant of the short vowel Ä (A with diaeresis), representing the vowel {{#invoke:IPA|main}} in dialect and some loanwords.<ref>Czambel, S. 1902. Rukoväť spisovnej reči slovenskej. Turčiansky Sv. Martin: Vydanie Knihkupecko-nakladateľshého spolku, p. 2.</ref> The letter is still used for this purpose in Slovak phonetic transcription systems.

UmlautEdit

HandwritingEdit

In handwriting in German and Swedish, the umlaut is sometimes written similarly to a double acute. In the Swedish alphabet, Å, Ä and Ö are letters in their own right.

ChuvashEdit

The Chuvash language written in the Cyrillic script uses a double-acute Ӳ, ӳ {{#invoke:IPA|main}} as a front counterpart of Cyrillic letter У, у {{#invoke:IPA|main}} (see Chuvash vowel harmony), likely after the analogy of handwriting in Latin script languages.<ref name="chuvash_hwform">A possible explanation of the diacritic being influenced by the German handwritten form is the early version of the Chuvash alphabet devised much more than 50 years before the other ones mentioned.</ref> In other minority languages of Russia (Khakas, Mari, Altai, and Khanty), the umlauted form Ӱ is used instead.

FaroeseEdit

File:Exampleoffaroeseuseofdoubleumlaut.jpg
Example of an ő on a Faroese traffic sign

Classical Danish handwriting uses "ó" for "ø", which becomes a problem when writing Faroese in the same tradition, as "ó" is a part of the Faroese alphabet. Thus ő is sometimes used for ø in Faroese.

ToneEdit

International Phonetic AlphabetEdit

The IPA and many other phonetic alphabets use two systems to indicate tone: a diacritic system and an adscript system. In the diacritic system, the double acute represents an extra high tone.

tone diacritic adscript
extra high main}} main}}
high main}} main}}
mid main}} main}}
low main}} main}}
extra low main}} main}}

One may encounter this use as a tone sign in some IPA-derived orthographies of minority languages, such as in the North American Native Tanacross (Athapascan). In line with the IPA usage it denotes the extra-high tone.

Unicode Edit

Unicode encodes a number of cases of "letter with double acute" as precomposed characters and these are displayed below. In addition, many more symbols may be composed using the combining character facility (Template:Unichar) that may be used with any letter or other diacritic to create a customised symbol but this does not mean that the result has any real-world application and thus are not shown in the table.


Template:Letters with diacritic/headerTemplate:HlistTemplate:Letters with diacritic/footer

Technical notesEdit

Template:Hungarian language O and U with double acute accents are supported in the Code page 852, ISO 8859-2, and Unicode character sets.

Code page 852Edit

Some of the box-drawing characters of the original DOS code page 437 were sacrificed in order to put in more accented letters (all printable characters from ISO 8859-2 are included).

Code point 0x8A 0x8B 0xEB 0xFB
Code page 852 Ő ő Ű ű

ISO 8859-2Edit

In ISO 8859-2, the characters Ő, ő, Ű, and ű take the place of some similar-looking (but distinct, especially at bigger font sizes) letters of ISO 8859-1.

Code point 0xD5 0xF5 0xDB 0xFB
ISO 8859-1 Õ õ Û û
ISO 8859-2 Ő ő Ű ű

UnicodeEdit

All occurrences of "double acute" in character names in the Unicode 9.0 standard:

description character Unicode HTML
Latin
LETTER O
WITH DOUBLE ACUTE
Ő
ő
U+0150
U+0151
&#336;
&#337;
LETTER U
WITH DOUBLE ACUTE
Ű
ű
U+0170
U+0171
&#368;
&#369;
Accents
COMBINING
DOUBLE ACUTE
ACCENT
◌̋ U+030B &#779;
DOUBLE ACUTE
ACCENT
˝ U+02DD &#733;
MODIFIER LETTER
MIDDLE
DOUBLE ACUTE ACCENT
˶ U+02F6 &#758;
Cyrillic
LETTER U
WITH DOUBLE ACUTE
Ӳ
ӳ
U+04F2
U+04F3
&#1266;
&#1267;
Canadian syllabics
FINAL
DOUBLE ACUTE
U+1425 &#5157;

LaTeX InputEdit

In LaTeX, the double acute accent is typeset with the \H{} (mnemonic for "Hungarian") command. For example, the name Paul Erdős (in his native Hungarian: Erdős Pál) would be typeset as

<syntaxhighlight lang="TeX"> Erd\H{o}s P\'al. </syntaxhighlight>

X11 InputEdit

In modern X11 systems (or utilities such as WinCompose on Windows systems), the double acute can be typed by pressing the Template:Key press followed by Template:Key press (the equal sign) and desired letter (Template:Key press or Template:Key press).

See alsoEdit

FootnotesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

Template:Sister project

Template:Navbox diacritical marks Template:Latin script