accent aigu
French
Etymology
Calqued or borrowed from Latin accentus acūtus (“sharp accent”), itself a calque of Ancient Greek προσῳδία ὀξύς (prosōidía oxús, “sharp accent”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ak.sɑ̃(.t‿)ɛ.ɡy/, /ak.sɑ̃(.t‿)e.ɡy/
- The /t/ is predominantly sounded, but not obligatory.
- Homophone: accents aigus (usually)
Descendants
- Norwegian Bokmål: accent aigu
See also
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
Borrowed from French accent aigu (“acute accent”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /akˈsaŋ.ɛɡyː/
- Rhymes: -yː
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: ac‧cent‧ai‧gu
Noun
accent aigu m (definite singular accent aiguen, indefinite plural accent aiguer, definite plural accent aiguene)
- (orthography) an acute accent (a diacritical mark ( ´ ) that can be placed above a number of letters in many languages)
- Synonyms: akutt, akutt aksent, akutt-tegn
- Antonyms: accent grave, gravis, gravistegn
- 1985, Gerd Brantenberg, Ved fergestedet, page 153:
- [lærerinnen] kom med accent aigu og accent grave. Og det underlige skjedde at Frida Grytum i løpet av få uker hadde ført Paris inn i klasseværelset
- [the teacher] came with acute accent and grave accent. And the strange thing happened that in a few weeks Frida Grytum had brought Paris into the classroom
See also
- accent grave (“grave accent”) and accent circonflexe (“circumflex”)
References
- aigu “accent aigu” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
- “accent aigu” in Det Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB).
- “akutt aksent” in Store norske leksikon
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