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A macron is a diacritic ¯ placed over a vowel. It is usually used in pronunciation guides as an indication that the vowel has a long sound. In Hawaiian it is used to indicate long vowels, which in turn influence the
placement of accent stress in words. In Latvian it is used to
indicate a long A sound. The macron is also used in the Hepburn
transcription of Japanese to indicate a long vowel, as in
kōtsū (交通) 'traffic' as opposed to kotsu (骨) 'bone' or 'knack (fig.)'. In Pinyin it is used to indicate the first of four Mandarin tones. It is often used in modern Latin
dictionaries to mark vowel length.
Vowel length in New Zealand Māori is phonemic, i.e. vowels are either pronounced short or long. Early writing in Māori did not
distinguish vowel length. Some have advocated that the double vowel orthography be used to distinguish vowel length. However, the
Māori Language Commission (Te Taura Whiri) advocate a macron be used to designate a long vowel. The use of
the macron is now wide spread in modern Māori writings, though many people use a diaeresis mark instead (e.g. Mäori instead of Māori) due to lack of support on
computers.
In Unicode, "combining macron" is one of the combining diacritical marks, its code is
U+0304 (in HTML, ̄ or ̄). There are also several
precomposed characters; their HTML/Unicode numbers are:
| Upper Case |
Lower Case |
| Character |
HTML Code |
Character |
HTML Code |
| Ā |
Ā |
ā |
ā |
| Ē |
Ē |
ē |
ē |
| Ī |
Ī |
ī |
ī |
| Ō |
Ō |
ō |
ō |
| Ū |
Ū |
ū |
ū |
| Ǖ |
Ǖ |
ǖ |
ǖ |
| Ȳ |
Ȳ |
ȳ |
ȳ |
The row before the last is the letter U/u with macron and diaeresis,
used in pinyin to indicate the letter ü pronounced with the first tone.
The final row is the letter Y/y with macron, used sometimes in teaching Latin.
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