May 11, 2018 - Example 4: Finding Angle Measures in Inscribed Quadrilaterals. Find the angle measures of GHJK. Step 1 Find the value of b.
![F G H J M C K J F G H J M C K J](https://ae01.alicdn.com/kf/HTB1ic2Il_nI8KJjSszgq6A8ApXa5/car-seat-cover-auto-seats-covers-cushion-for-opel-Astra-G-H-J-K-Corsa-C.jpg_640x640.jpg)
Links with this icon indicate that you are leaving the CDC website. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) cannot attest to the accuracy of a non-federal website. Linking to a non-federal website does not constitute an endorsement by CDC or any of its employees of the sponsors or the information and products presented on the website. You will be subject to the destination website's privacy policy when you follow the link.
CDC is not responsible for Section 508 compliance (accessibility) on other federal or private website. For more information on CDC's web notification policies, see.
The latest official IPA chart, revised to 2018. Here is a basic key to the symbols of the.
For the smaller set of symbols that is sufficient for English, see. Several rare IPA symbols are not included; these are found in the. For the Manual of Style guideline for pronunciation, see.
For each IPA symbol, an English example is given where possible; here 'RP' stands for. The foreign languages that are used to illustrate additional sounds are primarily the ones most likely to be familiar to English speakers,. For symbols not covered by those, recourse is taken to the populous languages,.
For sounds still not covered, other smaller but better analyzed languages are used, for example and (for the ) or (for ) for their respective related languages. The left-hand column displays the symbols like this: ( ).
Click on 'listen' to hear the sound; click on the symbol itself for a dedicated article with a more complete description and examples from multiple languages. Consonant sounds are spoken once followed by a vowel and once between vowels.
Y ( ) French r ue, German Like i, but with the lips rounded as for u. ( ) German Like ɪ, but with the lips rounded as for ʊ. ( ) Arabic ghālī and Swahili ghali 'expensive', Spanish sue gro Sounds rather like French ʁ or between ɡ and h. ( ) Mandarin 河南, taigh Like o but without the lips rounded, something like a cross of ʊ and ʌ. ( ) Italian ta gliatelle Like l, but more y-like. Rather like English vo lume.
( ) French l ui Like j and w said together. Voiced velar plosive These two characters should look similar: ɡ If in the box to the left you see the symbol rather than a lower-case open-tail g, you may be experiencing a well-known bug in the font MS Reference Sans Serif; switching to another font may fix it. On your current font: ɡ, and in several other fonts:.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ.: ɡ. Affricates and double articulation The tie bar is intended to cover both letters of an affricate or doubly articulated consonant. However, if your browser uses Arial Unicode MS to display IPA characters, the following incorrectly formed sequences may look better than the correct order (letter, tie bar, letter) due to a bug in that font: ts͡, tʃ͡, tɕ͡, dz͡, dʒ͡, dʑ͡, tɬ͡, kp͡, ɡb͡, ŋm͡.
![F G H J M C K J F G H J M C K J](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125580360/413153378.jpg)
Angle brackets True angle brackets, ⟨ ⟩, are unsupported by several common fonts.