◌́

Diacritical mark

 * 1)  a high tone.
 * 2)  a rising tone, or, in contrast to low $⟨◌̗⟩$, a high rising tone.

Usage notes
The Unicode code point is canonically equivalent to. It was intended for Vietnamese and later deprecated.

Compare grave accent: ⟨◌̀⟩.

Synonyms

 * [1]:

Diacritical mark

 * 1) * 1577, William Harrison, The Description of England in , Volume 1, Book 3, Chapter 12 “Of venemous beastes &c.,”
 * Our hony alſo is taken and reputed to be the beſt bycauſe it is harder, better wrought & clenlyer veſſelled vp, thẽ that which cõmeth from beyond the ſea, where they ſtampe and ſtraine their combes, Bées, & young Blowinges altogither into the ſtuffe, as I haue béene informed.
 * 1) * 1582, (translator), Batman vppon  his booke De proprietatibus rerum, London: Thomas East, Book 5, Chapter 26, “Of the shoulders,”
 * The twisted forkes be néedfull to binde the shoulders, and to depart them from the breast.
 * 1) * 1577, William Harrison, The Description of England in , Volume 1, Book 3, Chapter 12 “Of venemous beastes &c.,”
 * Our hony alſo is taken and reputed to be the beſt bycauſe it is harder, better wrought & clenlyer veſſelled vp, thẽ that which cõmeth from beyond the ſea, where they ſtampe and ſtraine their combes, Bées, & young Blowinges altogither into the ſtuffe, as I haue béene informed.
 * 1) * 1582, (translator), Batman vppon  his booke De proprietatibus rerum, London: Thomas East, Book 5, Chapter 26, “Of the shoulders,”
 * The twisted forkes be néedfull to binde the shoulders, and to depart them from the breast.
 * 1) * 1582, (translator), Batman vppon  his booke De proprietatibus rerum, London: Thomas East, Book 5, Chapter 26, “Of the shoulders,”
 * The twisted forkes be néedfull to binde the shoulders, and to depart them from the breast.
 * The twisted forkes be néedfull to binde the shoulders, and to depart them from the breast.

Usage notes
The first and last uses are not always distinct, but can be differentiated in words such as pâté ~ paté and résumé ~ resumé, where the final acute is retained even when the other French diacritics are dropped.

Usage notes

 * The acute accent indicates that a close-mid or close vowel is pronounced stressed. Stressed open-mid or open vowels are indicated with a grave accent `.

Usage notes
The acute accent indicates that a vowel is pronounced long. The letter Ů/ů also indicates a long vowel and is pronounced the same as Ú/ú.

Usage notes
The acute accent is used to disambiguate words when the placement of stress is important to distinguish meanings (e.g., één in its numerical sense of “one”). It is also used to place emphasis on a specific word or syllable. It is also retained in some French loanwords, mostly to distinguish from.

Usage notes
This diacritic is used to mark stress in phonetic transcriptions of foreign words.

Usage notes
The line is not seen as a diacritic, and all the letters are considered separate letters of the alphabet each having its own name. Other diacritic letters like É/é and Ć/ć appear in names of foreign origin.

Diacritical mark

 * 1)  The Greek tonos (τόνος) stress mark used in modern Greek.

Coordinate terms

 * The appendix describing the Greek alphabet
 * The appendix describing the Greek alphabet

Diacritical mark

 * 1) Represents the  of Taiwanese Hokkien in.
 * 2) Represents the  of Taiwanese Hokkien in.

Diacritical mark

 * 1) Used to distinguish  from.

Usage notes
In Classical Latin, an apex is not used with the letter ⟨⟩; rather, the letter is written taller, as ⟨⟩.

Diacritical mark

 * 1)  stressed-syllable indicator. Not used in everyday writing.
 * А́ а́ Е́ е́ И́ и́ О́ о́ У́ у́ Л́ л́ Р́ р́

Diacritical mark

 * 1)  representing the, also known as the , in Pinyin.

Usage notes
Not to be confused with, which represents the second tone in the Mandarin Zhuyin script.

Diacritical mark
• (wódahí)


 * 1) high tone

Usage notes
On a consonant, the kreska indicates that the consonant is pronounced with a palatal articulation. It is used only when the consonant is not followed by a vowel. A palatal consonant followed by a vowel is indicated by I/i after the consonant instead.

On the letter Ó/ó, the kreska indicates that it is pronounced as U/u but may alternate with O/o in inflections.

Usage notes

 * In the letter, forms with the stressed sound , as in  and.
 * In the letter, forms with the stressed sound , as in  and.
 * In the letter, forms with the stressed sound , as in  and.
 * In the letter, forms with the stressed sound , as in  and.
 * In the letter, forms with the stressed sound , as in  and.
 * Some words end in -ém (stressed ) or -éns (stressed ), as in, and.

Diacritical mark

 * 1)  A diacritical mark, both in the Cyrillic and Latin script, used to denote a long-rising accent. Not used in everyday writing. Can be used on vowels and the syllabic R:
 * 2) * Cyrillic: А́а́ Е́е́ И́и́ О́о́ У́у́ Р́р́
 * 3) * Latin: Áá Éé Íí Óó Úú Ŕŕ

Diacritical mark

 * 1)  Used to indicate stress patterns not predictable from orthographic rules.

Usage notes
In Vietnamese handwriting and signmaking, this tone mark may be written as a vertical line, like a combining ', and the letter I/i retains its tittle.

In earlier versions of Unicode, this tone mark was encoded as U+0341 rather than U+0301. Unicode compliant processes do not intentionally distinguish them.

Article

 * 1) The definite article
 * 'people', 'the people'