The palatal hook (◌̡) is a type of hook diacritic formerly used in the International Phonetic Alphabet to represent palatalized and prevelar consonants.[1] It is a small, leftwards-facing hook joined to the bottom-right side of a letter, and is distinguished from various other hooks indicating retroflexion, implosion, etc. Theoretically, it could be used on all IPA consonant letters, – even on those used for palatal consonants, – but it is not attested on all of the IPA letters of its era.[2] It was withdrawn by the IPA in 1989, in favour of a superscriptj following the consonant (i.e., ⟨ƫ⟩ becomes ⟨tʲ⟩).[1]
The IPA recommended that esh ⟨ ʃ ⟩ and ezh ⟨ʒ⟩ not use the palatal hook, but instead get special curled symbols: ⟨ ʆ ⟩ and ⟨ʓ⟩. The same has been done with ⟨ɮ⟩.[3] However, versions with the hook have been used and are supported by Unicode, though a ⟨ɮ⟩ with palatal hook isn't attested.[3]
Palatal hooks are also used for Lithuanian dialectology in the Lithuanian Phonetic Transcription System (or Lithuanian Phonetic Alphabet), including the exceptional form ꞔ, which while graphically a c plus palatal hook is conceptually a variant of and semantically equivalent to the ᶃ once recommended by the IPA.[4]
Scope
The palatal hook was introduced in 1921 and officially adopted in 1928. The last published IPA chart to support it was that of 1979. The following single non-palatal consonants appear on that chart. Those attested with palatal hook are bolded and set with the hook; the hooked letters are either in Unicode or are scheduled to appear in Unicode 18. The columns for palatal letters are omitted; they are generally redundant with the hook, though 'palatalized palatals' are described in the literature. C with hook, ꞔ, is not a palatal letter but a script variant of ᶃ.[2]
ᶆ
ɱ
ᶇ
ɳ
𝼔
ɴ
ᶈ
ᶀ
ƫ
ᶁ
ʈ
ɖ
ᶄ
ᶃ/ꞔ
q̡
ɢ̡
ʔ
ɸ̡
β̡
ᶂ
ᶌ
θ̡
ð̡
ᶊ
ᶎ
ʂ
ʐ
ᶋ
𝼘
ᶍ
ɣ̡
χ̡
ʁ̡
ʍ
ħ̡
ʕ̡
ꞕ
ɦ
ʋ̡
𝼕
ɻ
ɰ
w̡
𝼓
ɮ
ᶅ
ɭ
ᶉ
ʀ̡
𝼖
ɽ̡
ɓ
ɗ̡
ɠ
ʘ
ʇ
ʗ
ʖ
Other non-palatal consonants listed below the chart:
ᵵ, ɫ̡ (etc.): should be typeset with the hook letter and an overstruck tilde diacritic or vice versa
ɼ [used for Czech, does not occur palatalized]
ɺ
ɧ [used for Swedish, does not occur palatalized]
ʦ̡ 𝼗 𝼒 [ʣ̡ is implied but not listed on the chart]
^ abHandbook of the International Phonetic Association: A guide to the use of the International Phonetic Alphabet. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press. 1999.