The turned h (lowercase: ɥ; uppercase: Ɥ) is a rotated variant of the Latin letter h, used both as an extended letter in certain alphabets and as a symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). In the IPA, ɥ denotes the voiced labial-palatal approximant, a consonantsound articulated with the tongue raised toward the hard palate while the lips are rounded, resembling a simultaneous and glide.[1] This sound occurs in various languages, including French (as in huit [ɥit] "eight") and Mandarin Chinese (as a glide in syllables like yuē [ɥ̯ɛ̯˧˩]).[2][3]As a phonetic symbol, ɥ was introduced in the mid-20th century as part of the IPA's expansions to represent non-English sounds, appearing in the 1949 edition of the IPA handbook and retained in subsequent revisions.[4] It contrasts with related approximants like the labio-velar and palatal , and its voiceless counterpart is transcribed as [ɥ̊]. Beyond phonetics, the turned h serves as a distinct letter in the orthography of the Gio (Liberian Dan) variant of the Dan language, spoken primarily in Liberia, where it represents a vowel sound.[5] This usage stems from mid-20th-century missionary and linguistic efforts to develop a Latin-based script for the language and is not employed in the orthography of the Yacouba (Eastern Dan) variant in Côte d'Ivoire.[5]In Unicode, the lowercase ɥ is encoded at U+0265 (Latin Small Letter Turned H) within the IPA Extensions block, while the uppercase Ɥ is at U+A78D (Latin Capital Letter Turned H) in the Latin Extended-D block, ensuring consistent rendering across digital platforms for both phonetic and orthographic purposes. The symbol's design, attributed to early IPA developers, facilitates precise transcription in linguistic research, language teaching, and documentation of endangered languages.[6]
Phonetics
Articulation and Phonetic Description
The turned h, represented by the IPA symbol [ɥ], denotes the voiced labio-palatal approximant, a consonantal sound produced through simultaneous labial and palatal articulations. This involves protrusion and rounding of the lips alongside raising the tongue toward the hard palate, creating a high front tongue position reminiscent of the close front rounded vowel but functioning as a non-syllabic approximant due to the absence of significant vocal tract constriction. The airflow remains relatively unobstructed, resulting in a smooth, resonant quality without turbulent friction.[7]While the standard realization is voiced, with vocal fold vibration accompanying the approximation, voiceless variants [ɥ̥] occur in certain phonetic environments, though [ɥ] primarily indicates the voiced form. The articulatory configuration demands coordinated secondary labialization on the palatal gesture, distinguishing it from simpler single-place approximants. In the International Phonetic Alphabet, [ɥ] serves to transcribe this co-articulated sound precisely.[7]Acoustically, [ɥ] displays a formant profile similar to that of high front rounded vowels, featuring a low first formant (F1 around 180–300 Hz) reflective of its high tongue position and a second formant (F2) lowered to approximately 1000–1500 Hz due to the lip rounding, which reduces the resonant frequency compared to unrounded palatal sounds. This spectral lowering of F2, combined with a prominent F3 around 2500–2800 Hz, contributes to its vowel-like sonority while maintaining consonantal status through brevity and contextual positioning.[8][7]The sound [ɥ] contrasts with the palatal approximant , which lacks lip rounding and thus exhibits a higher F2 (typically 2000–2500 Hz), resulting in a brighter, less rounded timbre; the labio-palatal also differs from the compressed variant [ɥ̹], where increased lip protrusion enhances the labial component, potentially further depressing formants. These distinctions arise from variations in articulatory precision, with [ɥ] representing a standard simultaneous double articulation.
Tongue tip near alveolar ridge, often with lateral spreading
This table illustrates the articulatory parameters relative to common approximants, highlighting [ɥ]'s unique co-articulation.[7]
Usage in the International Phonetic Alphabet
The turned h symbol ⟨ɥ⟩ serves as the official designation in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) for the voiced labial-palatal approximant, a central approximant consonant involving simultaneous lip rounding and palatal approximation of the tongue. This usage was established in the IPA chart following the 1989 Kiel Convention, where the symbol was standardized for transcribing this co-articulated sound in phonetic descriptions across languages.[6]In practical application, ⟨ɥ⟩ appears in narrow phonetic transcriptions of languages featuring this approximant, distinguishing it from similar glides like the labio-velar approximant /w/ or the pure palatal approximant /j/. For instance, it transcribes the initial glide in French words such as huit ("eight"), rendered as [ɥit], where the sound combines lip rounding with a high front tongue position before the vowel /i/. Similarly, in Standard Mandarin Chinese, ⟨ɥ⟩ represents the onset in syllables like yù ("jade"), transcribed as [ɥy̯⁵¹], capturing the rounded palatal glide essential to the language's front rounded vowel series. These examples highlight ⟨ɥ⟩'s role in accurately conveying subtle articulatory distinctions that /w/ or /j/ cannot, as /w/ involves velar contact and /j/ lacks lip rounding; transcribers use ⟨ɥ⟩ when the sound exhibits clear labial-palatal coarticulation, often verified through spectrographic analysis or auditory perception tests.Diacritics can modify ⟨ɥ⟩ to indicate variations, such as the voiceless counterpart [ɥ̥] (using the voiceless diacritic ◌̥ below the symbol) or the nasalized form [ɥ̃] (with the tilde ◌̃ for nasalization), allowing precise notation of allophonic or contextual realizations in connected speech. For example, [ɥ̥] might appear in voiceless environments in certain dialects, while [ɥ̃] could denote nasal coarticulation before nasal vowels.In the official IPA chart, ⟨ɥ⟩ is positioned in the pulmonic consonants section, specifically within the approximants row under the palatal place of articulation, reflecting its primary palatal component alongside labialization. The chart's layout emphasizes its distinction from adjacent symbols like /j/ (palatal approximant) and /ɰ/ (velar approximant).
Articulation Type
Bilabial
Labiodental
...
Palatal
Labio-velar
Nasal
m
ɱ
...
ɲ
ŋʷ
Approximant
ɸ̞
ʋ
...
j ɥ
w
This placement aids phoneticians in systematically locating and referencing the symbol during transcription. Audio realizations of [ɥ] can be heard in resources demonstrating French or Mandarin glides, where it produces a smooth, rounded "y"-like transition with audible lip involvement.[6]
Orthographic Applications
Use in African Languages
The turned h serves as a letter in the orthography of the Dan language (also known as Gio), a Southeastern Mande language spoken by approximately 150,000 to 200,000 people primarily in Liberia, with its lowercase form ɥ and uppercase Ɥ representing the high back unrounded vowel /ɯ/.[9] This usage is specific to the Liberian variety of Dan, where the letter was incorporated to facilitate native literacy and distinguish the sound in written texts, differing from standard Latin alphabet letters.[9] The orthography, developed through efforts by linguistic organizations, first prominently appeared in religious materials such as the Gio New Testament published in 1989, supporting Bible translation and community reading initiatives.[9]In contrast, the Dan orthography in Côte d'Ivoire does not employ the turned h, relying instead on alternative conventions such as ü or ɯ for the /ɯ/ sound in its standardized Latin-based system revised in 1982 and further updated in 2014.[9] The letter's adoption in Liberia reflects adaptations for local phonology during orthographic development in the late 1980s, prioritizing accessibility on available printing and typing equipment while borrowing from phonetic symbols to represent the vowel without additional diacritics.[9] This implementation has been documented in literacy primers and publications by groups like the Dan Literacy Association as early as 2001.[9]While proposals for orthographies in other West African languages have occasionally referenced IPA-derived symbols like the turned h for vowels or approximants, its adoption remains limited beyond Dan, with no widespread use in Bantu or additional Mande languages.[10]
Native literacy and writing system for Gio New Testament and primers
Scientific transcription of sounds across languages
Variants and Related Forms
The primary forms of the turned h symbol in orthographic use are the lowercase ɥ (Unicode U+0265) and its uppercase counterpart Ɥ (Unicode U+A78D), the latter used in the Dan orthography for capitalization, though often substituted with the lowercase due to font limitations in early publications.[9] These forms derive from a rotated version of the Latin letter h, adapted for distinct representation in non-phonetic scripts.In the Dan orthography, the base ɥ may be modified with diacritics for tone, following local conventions, though such uses are rare in standard texts.
Uppercase turned h (capital form for Dan orthography)
This table summarizes the key Unicode forms used orthographically.[9]
History and Development
Origins in Phonetic Notation
The turned h symbol (ɥ) emerged in the late 19th century as part of efforts to create systematic phonetic notations for representing speech sounds, particularly semi-vowels and approximants. It first appeared in the 1887 prototype alphabet developed by the Phonetic Teachers' Association, led by Paul Passy, where it represented the labial-palatal approximant sound in French, such as in "huile" [ɥil].[11] This innovation was influenced by Henry Sweet's Romic alphabet, which used modifications of Latin letters including rotations to indicate articulatory features. Sweet's broader work on Organic Phonetics and sound notation in the 1870s and 1880s contributed to the conventions of rotating letters for complex glides, building on earlier systems.The symbol's development was influenced by Alexander Melville Bell's Visible Speech system, published in 1867, which employed rotated and inverted forms of letters to visually depict the positions and movements of speech organs, such as the tongue and lips.[12] Bell's approach, designed primarily for teaching pronunciation to the deaf, inspired Passy, Sweet, and other phoneticians to adopt rotations as a convention for signaling secondary articulations, like the labial component in palatal sounds. This evolved from earlier palaeotype influences by Alexander J. Ellis.The turned h first appeared in print in the Phonetic Teachers' Association's materials in 1888, marking a shift toward standardized printing of phonetic symbols and facilitating wider adoption among linguists and language teachers. By the early 20th century, the symbol gained traction in international phonetic circles.A pivotal moment came at the 1900 International Phonetic Congress in Paris, where the International Phonetic Association recommended notations including the turned h for semi-vowel sounds like the labio-palatal approximant in French "lui" [lɥi].[11] This was reflected in the 1900 IPA chart, with retention in the 1921 revisions, solidifying its role in phonetic transcription.[4]
Year
Event
1867
Alexander Melville Bell publishes Visible Speech, introducing rotated letters for articulatory notation.[12]
1886
Formation of the Phonetic Teachers' Association (later International Phonetic Association).[11]
1887
Prototype alphabet by Phonetic Teachers' Association introduces turned h (ɥ) for French sounds.
1888
First printed IPA alphabet includes turned h under other languages.[4]
1900
IPA Congress in Paris includes turned h in chart for semi-vowel notations.[4]
1921
IPA chart revisions retain turned h for labial-palatal approximant.[4]
1920s
Widespread adoption in linguistic publications, influencing transcriptions of European languages.[13]
Evolution and Standardization
The symbol ɥ underwent significant refinement in the mid-20th century as part of the International Phonetic Association's efforts to standardize phonetic notation for complex approximants. The 1951 revision of the IPA chart solidified its role in representing the voiced labio-palatal approximant, addressing debates over the transcription of French semi-vowels like those in words such as "huit" [ɥit], where distinctions from simpler glides were emphasized to capture secondary articulations accurately.[14]The 1989 Kiel Convention marked a pivotal update to the IPA, reorganizing the chart to better distinguish approximants from other manners of articulation. This revision clarified the placement of ɥ in the approximant row, separate from the labio-velar /w/ and palatal /j/, ensuring its use for sounds involving simultaneous labial and palatal features without overlap in representation. The convention's outcomes, approved by the IPA Council, promoted greater precision in global phonetic transcription.[15]In orthographic applications, particularly for African languages, the symbol saw practical standardization through efforts by SIL International. Around 1989, ɥ was incorporated into the Dan (Yacouba/Gio) orthography for Liberia, where it represents a high back unrounded vowel /ɯ/, enabling consistent writing systems for literacy materials and Bible translations, as seen in the Gio New Testament (1989). This supported practical orthographies for over 200,000 speakers, integrating the IPA symbol into everyday use, though not adopted in Côte d'Ivoire's Dan/Gio orthography.[5][16]Standardization faced challenges, notably resistance in some European linguistic traditions that preferred digraphs such as "hu" for similar sounds in romanized systems, viewing single IPA symbols as overly specialized for non-phonetic writing. Despite this, IPA committees in the 1970s and 1990s, along with SIL International's work on descriptive phonetics, pushed for unified adoption in both phonetic and orthographic contexts.[17]
Computing and Representation
Unicode Encoding
The lowercase turned h (ɥ) is encoded in the Unicode Standard as U+0265 LATIN SMALL LETTER TURNED H, located in the IPA Extensions block (U+0250–U+02AF). This code point was introduced in Unicode version 1.1 in June 1993.[18][19]The uppercase turned h (Ɥ) is encoded as U+A78D LATIN CAPITAL LETTER TURNED H, within the Latin Extended-D block (U+A720–U+A7FF). It was added in Unicode version 6.0 in October 2010.[20][21][22]Both characters are classified under the Latin script with a bidirectional class of Left-to-Right (L), ensuring standard rendering in left-to-right text flows. For case mapping, U+0265 is a lowercase letter that maps to itself in lowercasing operations and to U+A78D in uppercasing; conversely, U+A78D uppercases to itself and lowercases to U+0265. These mappings were formally defined in Unicode 6.0 to support the paired usage of the turned h forms.[19][23][21]Support for rendering these characters in fonts was initially limited in early Unicode adopters, as phonetic symbols like turned h were not prioritized in standard system fonts, often leading to missing glyphs or substitutions. Modern open-source fonts such as Noto Sans and DejaVu Sans provide reliable support with accurate glyphs for both lowercase and uppercase forms, facilitating better compatibility in digital typography. Legacy systems, particularly those predating Unicode 6.0, may encounter rendering issues, such as fallback to basic Latin h or blank spaces, due to incomplete font coverage.[24][25]In HTML and XML contexts, the lowercase turned h is commonly inserted via the decimal numeric character reference ɥ or hexadecimal ɥ. The uppercase form uses Ɥ or Ɥ. Neither character has canonical or compatibility decompositions, maintaining them as indivisible units in normalization processes.[19][21]
The turned h symbol (ɥ, Unicode U+0265) can be input using platform-specific methods that leverage Unicode support. On Windows systems, users can enter it via the Alt code method by holding the Alt key and typing 613 on the numeric keypad, provided the keyboard layout supports decimal Unicode input. On Linux, the standard approach involves the Compose key for multi-key sequences in compatible environments, or more reliably, the Unicode input method by pressing Ctrl+Shift+U followed by 0265 and Enter.[26] For macOS, the built-in Character Viewer provides access through the menu Edit > Emoji & Symbols; enabling the Phonetic Alphabet category allows searching for and inserting ɥ directly.[27] Specialized input method editors (IMEs) or third-party keyboards, such as the IPA SIL layout from SIL International, map it to key combinations like h followed by an equals sign (=).[28]In typography, the turned h's rotated orientation can lead to kerning challenges in standard Latin fonts, resulting in uneven spacing or overlaps. To mitigate this, phonetic-specific fonts like Charis SIL are recommended, as they include optimized kerning pairs for IPA symbols, ensuring consistent alignment and readability in linguistic texts.[29] These fonts support the full range of IPA extensions, including ɥ, with built-in adjustments for its unique shape.Software support for the turned h varies by application. In LaTeX, full integration is achieved through the tipa package, where the command \textturnh produces the symbol after loading \usepackage{tipa}.[30] Microsoft Word versions prior to 2010 offered partial support, often requiring legacy phonetic fonts like IPA93 for rendering, as native Unicode IPA extensions were not fully implemented until later updates.[31] Modern versions of Word, however, handle it seamlessly via the Symbol dialog under the IPA Extensions subset.A common rendering pitfall is the confusion with the barred h (ƕ, U+0195), which features a horizontal stroke rather than a full rotation; inadequate font support can cause the two to display interchangeably or as placeholders, especially in web browsers or older PDF viewers.