Modifier letter apostrophe
The modifier letter apostrophe (ʼ) is a glyph.
In the International Phonetic Alphabet, it is used to express ejective consonants, such as / kʼ /, / tʼ /, etc.
It denotes a glottal stop (IPA /ʔ/) in orthographies of many languages, such as Nenets.
It is encoded at U+02BC ʼ MODIFIER LETTER APOSTROPHE (HTML ʼ
).
In Unicode code charts it looks identical to the U+2019 ’ RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK.[1]
Although Unicode standard considers the U+2019 ’ RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK (not U+02BC ʼ MODIFIER LETTER APOSTROPHE) as preferred code point for the apostrophe in the English language,[2] there are reasoned objections to this decision[3] (the main argument is that English apostrophe is a part of a word).
U+02BC ʼ MODIFIER LETTER APOSTROPHE plays the role of Ukrainian apostrophe in internationalized domain names.[4]
See also
- Apostrophe
- ' (disambiguation) for similar symbols
- Modifier letter double apostrophe
References
- ↑ Unicode code charts. Unicode.org. Retrieved on 7 April 2013.
- ↑ The Unicode Consortium. Unicode.org.
- ↑ Which Unicode character should represent the English apostrophe? (And why the Unicode committee is very wrong.)
- ↑ IDN Variant TLDs – Cyrillic Script Issues