Inverted-circumflex Definition

noun

(phonology, now disused) A dipping tone.

Wiktionary

(typography) Any diacritic obtained by rotating a circumflex (ˆ) 180°.

Wiktionary
(now only informally) A háček.
Wiktionary

Other Word Forms of Inverted-circumflex

Noun

Singular:
inverted-circumflex
Plural:
inverted circumflexes

Origin of Inverted-circumflex

  • From its earliest attested use as an idiomatic phrase in 1810, inverted circumflex was first used to denote a dipping tone — an inversion of the peaking tone denoted by ⟨῀⟩, the Ancient Greek περισπωμένη (perispōmenē), commonly translated as “circumflex” — thence the name was applied to diacritics which marked such a dipping tone and, by extension, other tones to which it was suited; finally, due to such a diacritic’s resemblance to the háček, the name came to be applied to it as well.

    From Wiktionary

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inverted-circumflex

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