O͘o͘ is one of the six Hokkien vowels as written in the Pe̍h-ōe-jī (POJ) orthography. It is pronounced [ɔ]. Because Hokkien is a tonal language, the standard letter without a diacritic represents the vowel in the first and fourth tone with the fourth and eighth tone always only used in syllables with a syllable stop (i.e. ⟨-p⟩, ⟨-t⟩, ⟨-k⟩, ⟨-h⟩ /-ʔ/), and the other six to eight possible tone categories require one of the following tonal symbols to be written above it:

  • Ó͘ ó͘ (second tone) 《陰上/阴上》
  • Ò͘ ò͘ (third tone) 《陰去/阴去》
  • Ô͘ ô͘ (fifth tone) 《陽平/阳平》
  • Ǒ͘ ǒ͘ (sixth tone, used in Quanzhou-descended dialects) 《陽上/阳上》
  • Ō͘ ō͘ (seventh tone) 《陽去/阳去》
  • O̍͘ o̍͘ (eighth tone) 《陽入/阳入》
  • Ŏ͘ ŏ͘ / Ő͘ ő͘ (ninth tone, high rising in Taiwanese Hokkien)
O͘ o͘

History

edit
 
Carstairs Douglas's 1873 Chinese–English Dictionary of the Vernacular or Spoken Language of Amoy used a barred o with curl very similar to the one on the far left of the 4th row of letters from the top of this image to represent the /ɔ/ sound that Pe̍h-ōe-jī (POJ) usually represented with O͘ o͘

The character was introduced by the Xiamen-based missionary Elihu Doty in the mid-nineteenth century, as a way to distinguish the Hokkien vowels /o/ and /ɔ/ (the former becoming ⟨o͘⟩).[1] Since then it has become established in the Pe̍h-ōe-jī orthography, with only occasional deviations early in its usage – one example being Carstairs Douglas's 1873 Chinese–English Dictionary of the Vernacular or Spoken Language of Amoy, where he replaced the ⟨o͘ ⟩ with ⟨ө̛ ⟩ (an o with a curl, similar to that of the English Phonotypic Alphabet),[2] and a second example being Tan Siew Imm's 2016 dictionary of Penang Hokkien, where she replaced the ⟨o͘ ⟩ with ɵ.[3]

Computing

edit

In the Unicode computer encoding, it is a normal Latin o followed by U+0358 ◌͘ COMBINING DOT ABOVE RIGHT, and is not to be confused with the Vietnamese Ơ. This letter is not well-supported by fonts and is often typed as either (using the interpunct), o• (using the bullet), o' (using the apostrophe), oo (as used in Tâi-lô for Taiwanese Hokkien and Wāpuro rōmaji for Japanese), or ou (as used in Wāpuro rōmaji for Japanese).

References

edit
  1. ^ Klöter, Henning. "The History of Peh-oe-ji" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-29.
  2. ^ Douglas, Carstairs (1990) [1873]. Chinese English Dictionary of the Vernacular or Spoken of Amoy. Taipei: Southern Materials Center. ISBN 957-9482-32-2.
  3. ^ Tan, Siew Imm (2016). Penang Hokkien-English Dictionary. Retrieved 21 August 2019. {{cite book}}: |newspaper= ignored (help)