Below is the UK transcription for "e'en":
- Modern IPA: ?´jn.
- Traditional IPA: iːn.
- 1 syllable: "EEN"
Also, what is the difference between é and è?
/ (as “e” in “bet”, that is, the open e). It is used to make it clear that an “e” is not silent and isn't reduced to /?/ (uh). É with the acute accent denotes the pronunciation /e/ (as “e” in “hey”; somewhere between “e” in “bet” and “ee” in “see”).
Beside above, what is the sound of Ə? / sound. It is a Vowel sound and it's technical name is the 'Mid-Central Vowel'. It is often called the schwa sound but that refers to the symbol that is used it is nothing to do with the phonetics of the sound.
Keeping this in consideration, what does ē mean?
ē This is a "macron". It is used in Latin dictionaries to mark how the words should be pronounced. Latin didn't have stress: like most ancient Indo-European languages, it featured a constant flow of long and short syllables. The macron marks the long ones and the "braquia", the short ones.
What is the e sound?
This is the /e/ sound. It is a Vowel sound and it's technical name is the 'Close-Mid Front Unrounded Vowel'. To produce the sound put your tongue high, but not at the top, and at the front of your mouth and stretch out your lips, then make a short voiced sound with your mouth slightly open.
