Dania transcription

In today's world, Dania transcription is a topic of great relevance and debate. With the advancement of technology and globalization, Dania transcription has become a key element in our society, impacting different aspects of daily life. From economics to politics, Dania transcription has generated discussions and reflections in all areas. This is why it is essential to thoroughly analyze this phenomenon, understand its implications and seek solutions to the challenges it presents. In this article, we will explore different perspectives on Dania transcription, from its origin to its impact today, with the aim of offering a complete and enriching overview of this very relevant topic.

Table of consonant and vowel signs used in Dania, published by Jespersen in 1890[1]

Dania (Latin for Denmark) is the traditional linguistic transcription system used in Denmark to describe the Danish language. It was invented by Danish linguist Otto Jespersen and published in 1890 in the Dania, Tidsskrift for folkemål og folkeminder magazine from which the system was named.

Jespersen led an international conference in 1925 to establish an alternative to the International Phonetic Alphabet that approached the IPA but retained several elements of Dania transcription.

Consonant chart

Dania consonants[1][2]
Bilabial Labio-
dental
Dental Alveolar Palatalized Post-alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal m hm m ʍ n hn n ꬼ̣ ƞ
Stop p b b t d d ƫ
(τ )
ȶ* ȡ* * , k g
(gᷱ )
g (gᷱ) ʼ
Fricative/
approximant
w ƕ w s z ς ζ ʃ ʓ
ƀ f v v þ ð ð ˜ṛ 2 δ c j χ ɣ x q q 3 ˜r 2 hr r h
Lateral l hl l ȴ* (ł)
Trill ˜ʀ 2 ʀ ˏꭋ 2 ɹ˷ 2 ɹ
*These letter shapes are approximations. In Jespersen the loop goes the other way or (with ) crosses back over the leg of the letter. (See the image at the top of this page.)
 2 The swash joins to these letters as an arm to the left.
 3 Or perhaps ɋ.[3]

For mixed voicing, one normally writes (e.g. for voiced m) mh for final voicelessness and hm for initial voicelessness, with roman-type m for fully voiceless . But there are two ligatures: hw > ƕ and hj > . Roman-type b, d etc. are fully voiced, sounds which occur in dialects such as Bornholmsk. Note that roman typeface indicates a modally voiced sound with plosives, a voiceless sound with sonorants and laterals, and a partially voiceless sound with fricatives/approximants.

Vowel chart

A slash separates 'thin/narrow' from 'wide' vowels. A mid dot may be added for length. The comma for stød combines with this to form the 'comma-punkt'.

Dania vowels[1][2]
Front Central Back
unrounded rounded unrounded rounded unrounded rounded
High i y , ü 3 ı̣ 3 u
Near high ꞁ̇ ɥ ȣ
High-mid* e
(ė )
ø
(ø̇ )
ə ȯ o
(0 )
Mid ɛ
Low-mid œ ɜ ɔ̇ ɑ ɑ̊
Near-low æ 1 ö ɒ̤ , ɒ
Low ɑ̈ ɔ̈ ɑ̇ a 2 ɔ

* Mid ė, ø̇, 0 are weak allophones of e, ø, o.

1 This is an italic ⟨æ⟩. It may look the same as italic ⟨œ⟩ in some fonts.
2 This is an italic ⟨a⟩. It may look the same as italic ⟨ɑ⟩ in some fonts.
3 ü and are the Swedish and Norwegian orthographic 'u', respectively.

1925 Copenhagen conference

A conference held in Copenhagen in 1925 under the auspices of the Union Académique Internationale (UAI) produced recommendations for an international phonetic alphabet that was a compromise between Dania transcription, the still nascent IPA alphabet, and other systems then in use. Members of the convention objected, for example, to the non-iconic handling of palatal consonants in the IPA, and they excluded the letter C altogether. The system is as follows:[4]

Phonetic transcription is demarcated by square brackets, , and transcription by parentheses overstruck with small circles, ⹢...⹣ (as in Palaeotype).

Long vowels are marked by a high dot, , and half-long vowels by a low dot, . Extra-long vowels are .

Stress is , , or bold (before the syllable, not just the vowel) as in the IPA. It may be lexical or prosodic.

Tone is indicated by staveless marks before the syllable, e.g. level, rising, falling, rising-falling, falling-rising, 'waving'. and are also used for the 'simple' and 'compound' tones of Norwegian and Swedish.

Syllabic is and non-syllabic .

for voiceless (the opposite meaning of that diacritic in IPA) and for voiced. (A diacritic that resembles '()' joined at their tips, not supported by Unicode, is an alternative choice for 'voiced'.)

Nasal vowels are e.g. .

Labialization is . The same diacritic turned 180°, , is used for 'unrounded'.

Dental consonants are e.g. , retroflex either or .

Palatal consonants are marked, as in Dania transcription, with the looped tail of a cursive j. This is found on both alveolar t d ʦ s z n l and velar k g x (the last equivalent to IPA ). .

Palatalized consonants are either or . Finer shades may be indicated by , etc.

are retained generic hushing fricatives, covering both and palatal s-loop, z-loop.

For fricatives, Greek (bilabial), (dental) and (velar) are used. Cyrillic ф may be used for Greek ϕ to avoid confusion with the vowel ø. Greek δ should have a flat top, as it often does in handwriting. Latin x may be used for Greek χ.

is provided as an alternative to voiceless .

For IPA , dotless is used, to avoid confusion with the many national values of Latin j.

For the velar nasal, a variant with the tail is raised to (as in Teuthonista) was chosen to avoid clashing with diacritics placed under the letter.

Uvulars are small-cap Latin (or ), , , (predating any IPA letter for this sound), and full-cap Greek for the fricatives.

Pharyngeals are and (the latter a Unicode approximation).

is glottal stop, weak aspiration, strong aspiration.

is a trill; is the Czech sound written the same way. is a dorsal (but not uvular) rhotic.

For clarity, ligatures may be used for affricates, as in the IPA of the time.

Unreleased plosives are marked with a raised square, e.g. .

Clicks are indicated with a raised triangle over or after a letter (not supported by Unicode, but approximately or ).

Cyrillic was chosen for the high central unrounded vowel.

Vowels (1925)
Front Central Back
unrounded rounded unrounded rounded unrounded rounded
High i ü ы u
High-mid e ö ə ȯ o
Low-mid ɛ ɔ̈ ɔ̇ ɔ
Low a (ä) (ȧ) ɑ (a)

may be used in place of to avoid the confusion of the latter in italic typeface.

A closer vowel is (as in Lepsius) or ; a more open vowel is or .

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Otto Jespersen, Dania Lydskrift, in Dania, Tidsskrift for folkemål og folkeminder -- 1890-1892, vol. 1, p. 40
  2. ^ a b Marius Kristensen, 1924, Vejledning til brugen af Danias lydskrift, p. 28.
  3. ^ The contrast between italic ⟨q⟩ and italic ⟨ɋ⟩ in the chart at the end of Kristensen (1924) appears to be a typo. In the index and in the description in the text the contrast is instead between roman ⟨q⟩ and italic ⟨q⟩ (or ⟨ɋ⟩).
  4. ^ Otto Jespersen & Holger Pedersen (1926) Phonetic Transcription And Transliteration: Proposals Of The Copenhagen Conference, April 1925. Clarendon Press, Oxford.

See also