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monophthongs

Monophthongs are vowel sounds characterized by a relatively stable articulatory configuration during their articulation, i.e., their quality does not change much throughout the vowel's duration. They are contrasted with diphthongs, which involve a perceptible transition between two distinct vowel qualities within the same syllable.

In phonemic inventories, monophthongs are typically described by their height (high, mid, low), backness (front, central,

Many languages rely primarily on monophthongs as the nucleus of syllables, with a set of distinct vowels

Prototypical transcription uses a single IPA symbol to denote each monophthong, e.g., [i], [e], [a], [o], [u],

back),
and
lip
rounding
(rounded
vs
unrounded).
They
can
be
short
or
long
depending
on
the
language.
The
exact
inventory
and
the
way
vowels
interact
with
stress,
syllable
structure,
and
phonotactics
vary
across
languages.
that
do
not
require
a
glide
to
be
pronounced.
For
instance,
Spanish
has
five
primary
monophthongs:
[i],
[e],
[a],
[o],
[u],
while
French
and
German
have
larger
sets
that
include
mid
and
high
vowels.
English
contains
both
monophthongs
and
diphthongs,
and
some
vowels
that
are
diphthongal
in
other
dialects
may
be
realized
as
monophthongs
in
particular
varieties.
with
additional
symbols
for
more
varied
inventories.
The
presence
and
prominence
of
monophthongs
are
influenced
by
historical
changes,
language
contact,
and
dialectal
variation.
In
some
languages,
monophthongization
has
reduced
diphthongal
contrasts,
while
others
maintain
a
robust
system
of
both
monophthongs
and
diphthongs.