Breve

A breve (/brv/ (listen), less often /brɛv/ (listen); French: [bʁɛv] (listen); neuter form of the Latin brevis "short, brief") is the diacritic mark ˘, shaped like the bottom half of a circle. As used in Ancient Greek, it is also called brachy, βραχύ. It resembles the caron (the wedge or háček in Czech) but is rounded, in contrast to the angular tip of the caron.

˘
Breve
Diacritics in Latin & Greek
accent
acute´
double acute˝
grave`
double grave ̏
circumflexˆ
caron, háčekˇ
breve˘
inverted breve  ̑  
cedilla¸
diaeresis, umlaut¨
dot·
palatal hook  ̡
retroflex hook  ̢
hook above, dấu hỏi ̉
horn ̛
iota subscript ͅ 
macronˉ
ogonek, nosinė˛
perispomene ͂ 
overring˚
underring˳
rough breathing
smooth breathing᾿
Marks sometimes used as diacritics
apostrophe
bar◌̸
colon:
comma,
full stop/period.
hyphen˗
prime
tilde~
Diacritical marks in other scripts
Arabic diacritics
Early Cyrillic diacritics
kamora ҄
pokrytie ҇
titlo ҃
Gurmukhī diacritics
Hebrew diacritics
Indic diacritics
anusvara
chandrabindu
nukta
virama
visarga
IPA diacritics
Japanese diacritics
dakuten
handakuten
Khmer diacritics
Syriac diacritics
Thai diacritics
Related
Dotted circle
Punctuation marks
Logic symbols
Latin
Ăă
Ĕĕ
Ğğ
Ĭĭ
Ŏŏ
Œ̆œ̆
Ŭŭ
Greek
Cyrillic
Ӑӑ
Ӗӗ
Ӂӂ
Йй
Ўў

Compare caron:

  • Ǎ ǎ Ě ě Ǐ ǐ Ǒ ǒ Ǔ ǔ

versus breve:

  • Ă ă Ĕ ĕ Ĭ ĭ Ŏ ŏ Ŭ ŭ

Length

The breve sign indicates a short vowel, as opposed to the macron ¯, which indicates long vowels, in academic transcription. It is often used that way in dictionaries and textbooks of Latin, Ancient Greek, Tuareg and other languages. However, there is a frequent convention of indicating only the long vowels. It is then understood that a vowel with no macron is short. If the vowel length is unknown, a breve as well as a macron are used in historical linguistics (Ā̆ ā̆ Ē̆ ē̆ Ī̆ ī̆ Ō̆ ō̆ Ū̆ ū̆).

Some typefaces differentiate Cyrillic style (top) and Latin style breve (bottom)

In Cyrillic script, a breve is used for Й. In Belarusian, it is used for both the Cyrillic Ў (semivowel U) and in the Latin (Łacinka) Ŭ. Ў was also used in Cyrillic Uzbek under the Soviet Union. The Moldovan Cyrillic alphabet uses a breve on Ӂ to represent a voiced postalveolar affricate /d͡ʒ/ (corresponding to g before a front vowel in the Latin script for Moldovan). In Chuvash, a breve is used for Cyrillic letters Ӑ (A-breve) and Ӗ (E-breve). In Itelmen orthography, it is used for Ӑ, О̆ and Ў. The traditional Cyrillic breve differs in shape and is thicker on the edges of the curve and thinner in the middle, compared to the Latin one. In Latin types, the shape looks like ears.[1]

Contrastive use of Cyrillic kratka (for consonant [j]) and Latin breve (for short vowel [ĭ]) above и in Russian-Nenets dictionary

In Emilian, ĕ ŏ are used to represent [ɛ, ɔ] in dialects where also long [ɛː, ɔː] occur.

In Esperanto, u with breve (ŭ) represents a non-syllabic u in diphthongs //, analogous to Belarusian ў.

In the transcription of Sinhala, the breve over an m or an n indicates a prenasalized consonant; for example, n̆da is used to represent [ⁿda].

In the International Phonetic Alphabet, a breve over a phonetic symbol is used to indicate extra-shortness.

Other uses

In other languages, it is used for other purposes.

Encoding

Unicode and HTML code (decimal numeric character reference) for breve characters.

NameLetterUnicodeHTML
Breve (spacing) ˘U+02D8˘
Combining breve ◌̆U+0306̆
Combining breve below ◌̮U+032E̮
Combining double breve ◌͝◌U+035D͝
Combining double breve below ◌͜◌U+035C͜
Breve with inverted breve (spacing) U+AB5B꭛
Latin
A-breve Ă
ă
U+0102
U+0103
Ă
ă
E-breve Ĕ
ĕ
U+0114
U+0115
Ĕ
ĕ
I-breve Ĭ
ĭ
U+012C
U+012D
Ĭ
ĭ
O-breve Ŏ
ŏ
U+014E
U+014F
Ŏ
ŏ
U-breve Ŭ
ŭ
U+016C
U+016D
Ŭ
ŭ
Azerbaijani, Tatar, Turkish
G-breve Ğ
ğ
U+011E
U+011F
Ğ
ğ
Vietnamese
A-sắc-breve
U+1EAE
U+1EAF
Ắ
ắ
A-huyền-breve
U+1EB0
U+1EB1
Ằ
ằ
A-hỏi-breve
U+1EB2
U+1EB3
Ẳ
ẳ
A-ngã-breve
U+1EB4
U+1EB5
Ẵ
ẵ
A-nặng-breve
U+1EB6
U+1EB7
Ặ
ặ
Cyrillic
A-breve Ӑ
ӑ
U+04D0
U+04D1
Ӑ
ӑ
Ye-breve Ӗ
ӗ
U+04D6
U+04D7
Ӗ
ӗ
Zhe-breve Ӂ
ӂ
U+04C1
U+04C2
Ӂ
ӂ
Short I Й
й
U+0419
U+0439
Й
й
O-breve О̆
о̆
U+041E U+0306
U+043E U+0306
О̆
о̆
Short U Ў
ў
U+040E
U+045E
Ў
ў
Greek
Alpha with vrachy
U+1FB8
U+1FB0
Ᾰ
ᾰ
Iota with vrachy
U+1FD8
U+1FD0
Ῐ
ῐ
Upsilon with vrachy
U+1FE8
U+1FE0
Ῠ
ῠ
Arabic, Hittite, Akkadian, Egyptian transliteration[3]
H-breve below
U+1E2A
U+1E2B
Ḫ
ḫ
Hebrew transliteration[3]
E-cedilla-breve
U+1E1C
U+1E1D
Ḝ
ḝ

In LaTeX the controls \u{o} and \breve{o} put a breve over the letter o.

Notes

  1. Бреве кириллическое, "кратка" [Cyrillic breve ("kratka")] (in Russian). ParaType.
  2. For example, that word 한글 han-geul is romanized in McCune-Reischauer as han'gŭl. The spelling han-geul is based on South Korea's Revised Romanization of Korean adopted in 2000 in part for ease in computer use, not on McCune-Reischauer. It is common, for convenience, to omit writing all diacritical marks in McCune-Reishchauer including breves, in which case the word is spelled hangul not han'gŭl. North Korea uses a variant of McCune-Reischauer that also utilizes breves for those two vowels.
  3. "Code chart for Latin Extended Additional (U+1E00–U+1EFF)" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Retrieved 2016-11-12.
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gollark: If you *can* do it without introducing bugginess, which Rust lets you, it's obviously quite good.
gollark: > Many other programming languages, such as Ruby and Python, are implemented in C and you get those for free too.Don't lots of these also reply on a lot of system-specific stuff which isn't just "C"?
gollark: There actually *is* an alternative compiler, as far as I know, but it doesn't do borrow checking, so it isn't much use for real stuff.

See also

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