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  • pronunciation - How is æ supposed to be pronounced? - English . . .
    The symbol æ has multiple distinct uses A ligature of the Latin ae digraph In fact, æ isn't used much at all in modern English writing, but most of the time when you see it in that context, it is not being used as a distinct letter, but just a ligature of the Latin-derived digraph ae (which is the letter a followed by the letter e)
  • When is the old english letter Æ æ modernised to A, E and AE?
    The letter Æ æ in Old English represented a monophthongal vowel that could be either of two lengths: short (transcribed in the International Phonetic Alphabet as æ ) or long (transcribed in the International Phonetic Alphabet as æː , often written in dictionaries and modern editions of Old English texts as ǣ to distinguish it from the
  • When do I use æ? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In English æ is often eschewed in favour of the digraph ae Usage experts often consider that incorrect, especially for foreign words in which æ is considered a letter (such as Æsir, Ærø) or brand names that use the ligature or a variation of it (such as Æon Flux, Encyclopædia Britannica, Ætna, Inc )
  • phonetics - What is the difference between a and æ ? - English . . .
    The vowels [a] and [æ] are close to each other Some phoneticians consider that the vowel of add or shack in modern British English has changed from [æ] to [a], and so some (not all) British dictionaries now represent it by a See Lexico The vowel has not changed in American English, so æ is the vowel in add or shack in
  • pronunciation - Difference between æ and ɛ - English Language . . .
    The exact distribution of this raised allophone of æ varies between speakers, but it's generally conditioned by the identity of the following consonant It's common to hear it before nasal consonants So in the particular case of ten and tan, the latter word might very well have a closer vowel than the first for many American English speakers
  • How is Æ pronounced at the beginning of a word? Or is that simply a . . .
    The ‹Æ› ligature doesn't represent any particular sound Its primary uses in English are to represent the Latin diphthong spelled ‹ae›, whose pronunciation depends on where you learned your Latin, and from whom (I was taught ai in the US and e: in Austria; I believe many English Latinists prefer i: )
  • pronunciation - How can I practice differentiating between the æ and . . .
    Read what the important phonetician Daniel Jones said about æ The correct sound of æ can generally be obtained by remembering that æ must have a sound intermediate in quality between ɛ and a In practising the sound, the mouth should be kept very wide open The sound may be obtained by imitating the baaing of a sheep which is very like
  • When is the Short A sound actually spelled with an AE?
    The short æ sound was actually spelled "æ" (which was a single letter called "Ash", not the pair of letters "ae") in Old English Ælfrik and Cædmon mentioned in the answer were of course Old English words which later fell out of use, and whose spelling was never "modernized " –




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