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Table 22: metre Text-mode Accents<br />

Áá \acutus{A}\acutus{a}<br />

Ăă \breve{A}\breve{a}<br />

Ãã \circumflexus{A}\circumflexus{a}<br />

Ää \diaeresis{A}\diaeresis{a}<br />

Àà \gravis{A}\gravis{a}<br />

Āā \macron{A}\macron{a}<br />

Table 23: t4phonet Text-mode Accents<br />

\textdoublegrave{A}\textdoublegrave{a}<br />

\textvbaraccent{A}\textvbaraccent{a}<br />

\textdoublevbaraccent{A}\textdoublevbaraccent{a}<br />

The idea behind the t4phonet package’s text-mode accents is to provide an interface<br />

to some of the accents in the T4 font encoding (accents marked with “‡” in Table 17<br />

on page 14) but using the same names as the tipa accents presented in Table 18 on<br />

page 15.<br />

Table 24: arcs Text-mode Accents<br />

⌢⌢ Aa<br />

\overarc{A}\overarc{a} A⌣ a \underarc{A}\underarc{a}<br />

⌣<br />

The accents shown above scale only to a few characters wide. An optional macro<br />

argument alters the effective width of the accented characters. See the arcs documentation<br />

for more information.<br />

Table 25: semtrans Accents<br />

Ää \D{A}\D{a} Ăă \U{A}\U{a}<br />

A<br />

a<br />

\T{A}\T{a} ∗<br />

\T is not actually an accent but a command that rotates its argument 180° using<br />

the graphicx package’s \rotatebox command.<br />

Table 26: ogonek Accents<br />

A↩ a ↩ \k{A}\k{a}<br />

Table 27: combelow Accents<br />

A, a, \cb{A}\cb{a}<br />

\cb places a comma above letters with descenders. Hence, while “\cb{s}” produces<br />

“s,”, “\cb{g}” produces “g‘”.<br />

17

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