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In IPA usage, the ejective mark always modifies a letter. It may be typeset larger than an apostrophe, as here.
Translingual
Etymology
Use for glottal stop derives from the apostrophe, for example in Hawaiian (now replaced by the okina to distinguish it from an actual apostrophe).
Use to mark ejective consonants started with transliteration of Georgian script; it was an adaptation of the spiritus lenis and contrasted with the spiritus asper used to mark aspirated consonants, as the most salient distinctive feature of Georgian ejectives was that they were not aspirated. Usage extended from there to other languages with ejective consonants.
A final glottal stop is unwritten on syllables with this tone. Thus aʼ transcribes both /a᷇/ and /a᷇ʔ/. Full falling tone is unmarked, except for syllables with a final glottal stop, which is transcribed ⟨,⟩.
A final glottal stop is unwritten. Thus /a/ with a final plosive and high tone is written abʼ adʼ agʼ aʼ for .
High tone is written ⟨ˮ⟩ with a final vowel or nasal.
The nineteenth letter of the Navajo alphabet. It is used before or after a vowel to indicate a glottal stop.
Usage notes
Every Navajo word begins with either the glottal stop or another consonant. If an orthographic vowel begins a word, it is pronounced with a glottal stop: ooljééʼ (sometimes spelled ʼooljééʼ).
⟨ʼ⟩ forms the following Navajo letters: chʼ, kʼ, tʼ, tłʼ, tsʼ.
Marks instances of the glottal stop /ʔ/ that alternate with nasal consonants н(n°)/n/, ӈ(ŋ°)/ŋ/ in inflection, in contrast with the letter ˮ. Often transcribed h in scholarly works.