Wikibooks: Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet and pronunciation

= Alphabet = The Esperanto alphabet has 28 letters. Uppercase A B C Ĉ D E F G Ĝ H Ĥ I J Ĵ K L M N O P R S Ŝ T U Ŭ V Z Lowercase a b c ĉ d e f g ĝ h ĥ i j ĵ k l m n o p r s ŝ t u ŭ v z Names a bo co ĉo do e fo go ĝo ho ĥo i jo ĵo ko lo mo no o po ro so ŝo to u ŭo vo zo Four letters from the English a...

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spelling ftwikibooks:enwikibooks:206:778 2024-06-23T07:45:13+00:00 Wikibooks: Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet and pronunciation https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet_and_pronunciation eng eng Book ftwikibooks 2024-06-09T12:11:50Z = Alphabet = The Esperanto alphabet has 28 letters. Uppercase A B C Ĉ D E F G Ĝ H Ĥ I J Ĵ K L M N O P R S Ŝ T U Ŭ V Z Lowercase a b c ĉ d e f g ĝ h ĥ i j ĵ k l m n o p r s ŝ t u ŭ v z Names a bo co ĉo do e fo go ĝo ho ĥo i jo ĵo ko lo mo no o po ro so ŝo to u ŭo vo zo Four letters from the English alphabet have been dropped ndash Q W X and Y ndash and there are six new accented letters Ĉ Ĝ Ĥ Ĵ Ŝ and Ŭ . The first five have an angle shape accent called a circumflex ( ^ ) over them whilst the last has an accent rather like the bottom part of a circle which is called a breve ( ˘ ). All of the accented letters are unique to Esperanto except for ŭo ( Ŭ ) which also exists in Belarusian and ĝo ( Ĝ ) which also exists in Aleut. Some of the accented letters may be used in transcription systems for languages that use non Latin alphabets. (For example ŝo ( Ŝ ) is used as the ISO 9 1995 transliteration of the Russian Cyrillic letter shcha ( Щ ).) = Vowels = As in English five letters are vowels ( A E I O U ) and the rest are consonants. The letter ŭo ( Ŭ ) is a consonant not a vowel. = Collation = Collation in Esperanto is the same as for English except that the accented characters are counted as separate characters and collated after their non accented versions. Collation is as shown in the table above. = Pronunciation = Each letter in Esperanto has only one pronunciation (allowing for cultural variation) and no letters are silent. There are six dipthongs (see [[the next section]]) but their pronunciation follows logically from their constituent letters except for being shortened into a single syllable. This means that Esperanto is pronounced just as it is spelled. Also each sound has only one way of being written so it is very easy to spell Esperanto words you hear. The technical description for these traits is that Esperanto is phonetic and orthographic . = Stress = The stress on every word is put on the penultimate (second to last) syllable. BookCat filing=deep Book aleut WikiBooks - Open-content textbooks
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description = Alphabet = The Esperanto alphabet has 28 letters. Uppercase A B C Ĉ D E F G Ĝ H Ĥ I J Ĵ K L M N O P R S Ŝ T U Ŭ V Z Lowercase a b c ĉ d e f g ĝ h ĥ i j ĵ k l m n o p r s ŝ t u ŭ v z Names a bo co ĉo do e fo go ĝo ho ĥo i jo ĵo ko lo mo no o po ro so ŝo to u ŭo vo zo Four letters from the English alphabet have been dropped ndash Q W X and Y ndash and there are six new accented letters Ĉ Ĝ Ĥ Ĵ Ŝ and Ŭ . The first five have an angle shape accent called a circumflex ( ^ ) over them whilst the last has an accent rather like the bottom part of a circle which is called a breve ( ˘ ). All of the accented letters are unique to Esperanto except for ŭo ( Ŭ ) which also exists in Belarusian and ĝo ( Ĝ ) which also exists in Aleut. Some of the accented letters may be used in transcription systems for languages that use non Latin alphabets. (For example ŝo ( Ŝ ) is used as the ISO 9 1995 transliteration of the Russian Cyrillic letter shcha ( Щ ).) = Vowels = As in English five letters are vowels ( A E I O U ) and the rest are consonants. The letter ŭo ( Ŭ ) is a consonant not a vowel. = Collation = Collation in Esperanto is the same as for English except that the accented characters are counted as separate characters and collated after their non accented versions. Collation is as shown in the table above. = Pronunciation = Each letter in Esperanto has only one pronunciation (allowing for cultural variation) and no letters are silent. There are six dipthongs (see [[the next section]]) but their pronunciation follows logically from their constituent letters except for being shortened into a single syllable. This means that Esperanto is pronounced just as it is spelled. Also each sound has only one way of being written so it is very easy to spell Esperanto words you hear. The technical description for these traits is that Esperanto is phonetic and orthographic . = Stress = The stress on every word is put on the penultimate (second to last) syllable. BookCat filing=deep
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title Wikibooks: Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet and pronunciation
spellingShingle Wikibooks: Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet and pronunciation
title_short Wikibooks: Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet and pronunciation
title_full Wikibooks: Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet and pronunciation
title_fullStr Wikibooks: Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet and pronunciation
title_full_unstemmed Wikibooks: Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet and pronunciation
title_sort wikibooks: esperanto/appendix/alphabet and pronunciation
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