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    Semivowels (more rarely: semiconsonants or glides) are non-syllabic vowels that form diphthongs with syllabic vowels. They may be contrasted with approximants, which are similar to but closer than vowels or semivowels and behave as consonants. Semivowels are normally written by adding the IPA non-syllabic mark to a vowel symbol, but often for simplicity the vowel symbol alone is written.

    To illustrate, the English word wow may be transcribed as (or abbreviated to ). Even though both the and the are similar to the vowel , the transcription indicates that the initial segment is considered to be a consonant by the transcriber, while the final segment is considered to form a diphthong with the preceding vowel. The approximant is more constricted and therefore more consonant-like than the semivowel . (Using the transcription for the diphthong rather than as one might expect is a minor phonetic point. See diphthong for details.)

    Because they are so similar phonetically, the concepts of semivowel and approximant are often used interchangeably. In this conflated usage, semivowels are defined as those approximants that correspond phonetically to specific close vowels. These are , corresponding to ; for ; for ; and for . (See approximant for details.) However, languages such as Nepali and Samoan have additional semivowels such as and that correspond to mid vowels, and which other than being non-syllabic are not at all like consonants.


        Semivowel
            Examples
            See also

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    Examples
    Close semivowels

      English eye
      English cow
    Close vs. mid semivowels

      Samoan ’ai "probably"
      Samoan ’ae "but"
      Samoan ’auro "gold"
      Samoan ao "a cloud"

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    See also




     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Semivowel". link