Because there are more letter sounds than there are letters in the alphabet, dictionaries use diacritical marks to indicate which phoneme to give to a grapheme; that is, which sound to give to a letter unit. Although we do not typically use diacritical marks for consonant sounds, we do teach them for vowel sounds.
The most common diacritical marks are the long vowel mark ( ¯ ), called the macron; the short vowel mark ( ˘ ), called the breve, and the schwa mark ( ə ).
Long Vowel Mark
The long vowel mark placed over a vowel indicates that it will be pronounced just as it sounds when we recite the alphabet:
• ā as in ate
• ē as in evil
• ī as in ice
• ō as in open
• ū as in use or in flute
• ȳ as in cry
Short Vowel Mark
The short vowel mark placed over a vowel is as follows:
• ă as in apple
• ĕ as in elementary
• ĭ as in idiom
• ŏ as in on
• ŭ as in under
• (Note that no mark is given for short y; the short i sound is used instead.)
Schwa Mark
The schwa mark represents the indistinct vowel sound that is the unaccented or unstressed syllable of a multisyllabic word:
• ə as in ago
• ə as in happen
• ə as in legible
• ə as in common
• ə as in suggest
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