accent aigu
French
Etymology
From Latin accentus (“accent”) acūtus (“sharp”), a calque of Ancient Greek προσῳδία (prosōidía, “accent”) ὀξύς (oxús, “sharp”). For more detail, see French accent, aigu.
Cognate to English acute accent.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ak.sɑ̃.t‿ɛ.ɡy/, /ak.sɑ̃.t‿e.ɡy/
Descendants
- Norwegian Bokmål: accent aigu
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
Borrowed from French accent aigu (“acute accent”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /akˈsaŋ.ɛɡyː/
- Rhymes: -yː
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: ac‧cent‧ai‧gu
Noun
accent aigu m (definite singular accent aiguen, indefinite plural accent aiguer, definite plural accent aiguene)
- (orthography) an acute accent (a diacritical mark ( ´ ) that can be placed above a number of letters in many languages)
- 1985, Gerd Brantenberg, Ved fergestedet, page 153:
- [lærerinnen] kom med accent aigu og accent grave. Og det underlige skjedde at Frida Grytum i løpet av få uker hadde ført Paris inn i klasseværelset
- [the teacher] came with acute accent and grave accent. And the strange thing happened that in a few weeks Frida Grytum had brought Paris into the classroom
- Synonyms: akutt, akutt aksent, akutt-tegn
- Antonyms: accent grave, gravis, gravistegn
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Usage notes
The acute accent is not part of the Norwegian alphabet, however it appears in numerous words, especially involving the letter "é" from French; allé (“avenue”), café noir (“black coffee”), tupé (“toupee”), armé (“army”) and assemblé (“assembly”). Other examples include the words háček (“háček”) from Czech, tekstilduojár (“Sami textile maker”) from Sami, and jom kippúr (“Yom Kippur”) from Hebrew. Native Norwegian uses of the acute accent include én (“a, an”) and éi (“a, an”), stressed forms of en (“a, an”) and ei (“a, an”), respectively. It is also sometimes used for foreign names and cities, such as Bogotá (“Bogota”) and Andalucía (“Andalusia”).
See also
- accent grave (“grave accent”) and accent circonflexe (“circumflex”)
References
- aigu “accent aigu” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
- “accent aigu” in Det Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB).
- “akutt aksent” in Store norske leksikon