Centralized vowels A
centralized vowel is a
vowel that is more
central than some point of reference, or that has undergone a shift in this direction. The diacritic for this in the
International Phonetic Alphabet is the diaeresis, . For example, to transcribe
rounded and
unrounded near-close central vowels, the symbols may be used. In other (non-IPA) transcription systems, (or ) will be seen instead of (by analogy with ). Before the letters were added to the IPA in 1993, the symbols were used for these near-
schwa values. would now be assumed to represent articulations intermediate between and . Similarly, would be intermediate between and . However, since the IPA does not specify the exact amount of centralization that centralized vowels have, the symbols and can in modern transcriptions be used at times to transcribe fully central vowels, or vowels that have a variable amount of centralization. In the majority of languages described as having an (which denotes a
front vowel), the vowel is actually
central and therefore a more narrow transcription of it is . However, this symbol is not commonly used mainly because of the common practice of avoiding using diacritics wherever possible, and because very few languages contrast front and central open unrounded vowels. Instead of the diacritic for centralization, the
advanced or
retracted diacritics may be used (an equivalent transcription of is retracted ), but the concept of centralization is convenient in cases where
front and
back vowels move toward each other, rather than all advancing or retracting in the same direction. When a transcription system uses
both the centralized and the advanced/retracted diacritics, generally the former indicates a more central vowel, so that e.g. indicates an only slightly centralized (retracted) front vowel , whereas indicates a more centralized (retracted) front vowel, or even a fully central vowel .
Centralized semivowels Semivowels can be centralized much like vowels; for instance, the semivowels corresponding to the close central vowels can be written as centralized palatal semivowels , or centralized velar semivowels . The transcription vs. may also denote a distinction in the
type of rounding, with the former symbol denoting a semivowel with compressed rounding typical of front vowels, and the latter symbol denoting a semivowel with protruded rounding typical of central and back vowels, though an additional verbal clarification is usual in such cases, as the IPA does not provide any official means to distinguish sounds with compressed and protruded rounding.
Mid-centralized vowels Mid-centralized vowels are closer to the midpoint of the vowel space than their referent vowels. That is, they are closer to the mid-central vowel schwa not just by means of centralization, but also by
raising or
lowering. The diacritic used to mark this in the International Phonetic Alphabet is the over-cross, . To avoid an ascender, or a diacritic above, the mark may be placed below the letter, as in In most languages, vowels become mid-centralized when spoken quickly, and in some languages, such as English and Russian, many vowels are also mid-centralized when
unstressed. This is a general characteristic of
vowel reduction. Mid-centralization of vowels can be a speech impediment. An example from Polish is ('I saw two cars today'), instead of the standard . This can severely affect intelligibility. ==More and less rounded==