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(Redirected from A-ogonek) Latin letter A with ogonek; used in Polish and Lithuanian Not to be confused with A with ogonek (Cyrillic).
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Latin A with ogonek.

Ą (minuscule: ą) is a letter in the Polish, Kashubian, Lithuanian, Creek, Navajo, Western Apache, Chiricahua, Osage, Hocąk, Mescalero, Gwich'in, Tutchone, and Elfdalian alphabets. It is formed from the letter a and an ogonek ("little tail") and usually, except in modern Lithuanian and Polish, denotes a nasal a sound.

Polish

In the Polish alphabet, ą comes after a, but never appears at the beginning of a word. Originally, ą used to represent a nasal a sound, but in modern times, its pronunciation has shifted to a nasal o sound. The letter does not have one determined pronunciation and instead, its pronunciation is dependent on the sounds it is followed by.

Pronunciation

Pronunciation of ą depending on its position
Position Pronunciation Example
Phonemic Phonetic Orthography Pronunciation

(phonemic)

Pronunciation

(phonetic)

ą + f, w, s, z, sz, ż, rz, h, ch; word-finally /ɔŋ/ ('they are') /sɔŋ/
ą + k, g mąka ('flour') /ˈmɔŋka/
ą + t, d, c, dz, cz, /ɔn/ błąd ('error') /bwɔnt/
ą + p, b /ɔm/ ząb ('tooth') /zɔmp/
ą + ś, ź, ć, , si, zi, ci, dzi /ɔɲ/ bądź ('be') /bɔɲt͡ɕ/
ą + l, ł /ɔ/ wziął ('he took') /vʑɔw/

In some dialects, word-final ą is also pronounced as /ɔm/; thus, robią is occasionally pronounced as .

History

Polish ą sound evolved from a long nasal a sound of medieval Polish into a short nasal o sound in the modern language. The medieval vowel, along with its short counterpart, evolved in turn from the merged nasal *ę and *ǫ of Late Proto-Slavic.

Evolution
Early Proto-Slavic *em/*en/*im/*in and *am/*an/*um/*un
Late Proto-Slavic /ẽ/ and /õ/, transcribed ⟨ę⟩ and ⟨ǫ⟩
Medieval Polish short and long /ã/, sometimes written approx. ⟨ø⟩
Modern Polish short /ã/ → /ɛŋ/, /ɛn/, /ɛm/…, written ⟨ę⟩

long /ã/ → /ɔŋ/, /ɔn/, /ɔm/…, written ⟨ą⟩

Another explanation is connected to the adoption of the Old Czech-style orthography of the Latin alphabet to write Polish at the turn of the 16th century. In Poland-Lithuania, Latin still dominated in writing in the Kingdom of Poland, and the Cyrillic-based vernacular of Ruthenian had been in official use in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania since the 13th century. In pronunciation, the Church Cyrillic letter big yus (Ѫ ѫ) corresponds to the pronunciation of the Polish ą. However, it is little yus (Ѧ ѧ), which is phonetically similar to ę and, more importantly, shares visual resemblances with the Latin alphabet initial letter (A, a) plus an ogonek, that some believe led to ogonek's introduction. This, according to proponents of the theory, resulted in the letter ą for denoting the nasal o, when it logically should have been ǫ rather than ą. When the ogonek had already been in place as the diacritic for marking nasality in vowels, it was appended to e, resulting in ę for nasal e.

Alternations

The letter often alternates with ę.

  • 'tooth': ząbzęby ('teeth'),
  • 'snake': wążwęże ('snakes')
  • 'husband' in nominative: mążz mężem ('with husband', in instrumental case)
  • 'weight': ciężarciążyć ('to weigh down, to be a burden'),
  • 'month': miesiącmiesięczny ('monthly'),
  • 'judge': sędziasądzić ('to judge, think')
  • 'row' in nominative: rządcztery razy z rzędu ('four times in a row', genitive case)

However, in words derived from rząd ('government'), the vowel does not change. Thus, rządu (genitive of rząd) retains the ą, e.g., rozporządzenie rządu ('government's ordinance').

Lithuanian

In modern Lithuanian, it is no longer nasal and is now pronounced as a long a. It is the second letter of the Lithuanian alphabet called a nosinė (nasal a).

The letter is most often found at the end of the noun to construct an ending of accusative case, as in aslą , the accusative of asla (ground, floor); both a and ą in aslą are pronounced (a long a). Thus, ą is used to distinguish between the transcription of accusative and the nominative cases of the noun asla.

It is also used when converting present tense verbs into participles, e.g., (matąs (somebody who is seeing (matyti) right now).

Nasal an forms are now pronounced , as in sąrašas (list) and san-grąža (turnover, return).

In some cases, ą, ę and į (but never ė) may be used in different forms, as in tąsa (extension) – tęsia (extends) – tįsoti (to lie extended). Finally, some verbs have it in the middle of a word but only in the present tense, e.g., (bąla (is getting white), but not pabalo (has become white).

The letter can also be found at the beginning of several words, e.g., ąsotis (jug).

The Americas

The ogonek in European languages is attached to the right leg of A.
Sometimes, in Native American languages, it is under the middle of A.
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (June 2008)

In some indigenous languages of the Americas, the letter denotes a nasal a sound:

Elfdalian

This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (March 2015)

The Elfdalian alphabet contains the letters that occur in the Swedish alphabet as well as various letters with ogonek to denote nasality. Ą and ą denote a nasal a sound.

Reconstructed language

Scholars who have reconstructed the Proto-Germanic language (the ancestor of all modern Germanic languages, spoken c. 500 BC – AD 500) use the letter ą to denote a nasal vowel.

Computing codes

Character information
Preview Ą ą
Unicode name LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH OGONEK LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH OGONEK
Encodings decimal hex dec hex
Unicode 260 U+0104 261 U+0105
UTF-8 196 132 C4 84 196 133 C4 85
Numeric character reference Ą Ą ą ą
Named character reference Ą ą

See also

Latin script
Alphabets (list)
Letters (list)
Letters of the ISO basic Latin alphabet
Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo Pp Qq Rr Ss Tt Uu Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz
Letter A with diacritics
Áá Àà Ăă Ắắ Ằằ Ẵẵ Ẳẳ Ââ Ấấ Ầầ Ẫẫ Ẩẩ Ǎǎ Åå Ǻǻ Ää Ǟǟ Ãã Ȧȧ Ǡǡ Ąą Ą́ą́ Ą̃ą̃ Āā Ā̀ā̀ Ảả
Ȁȁ A̋a̋ Ȃȃ Ạạ Ặặ Ậậ Ḁḁ Ⱥⱥ Ꞻꞻ
Letters using ogonek sign ( ◌̨ )
Ąą Ą́ą́ Ęę Į į Ǫǫ Ųų
Multigraphs
Digraphs
Trigraphs
Tetragraphs
Pentagraphstzsch
Keyboard layouts (list)
Historical Standards
Current Standards
Lists

References

  1. Tomasz Kamusella. 2019. Is hot air mightier than states? The big Central European history of a little tail (ogonek). New Eastern Europe. 12 Dec.
  2. "39a. Gramatika".
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