Hi,
I happened to see that in the phonetic scripting some characters are written as superscript. For example in Danger - /ˈdeɪn.dʒər/ . The /r/ sound was actually a superscript. I am not able to write it like that here. The pronunciation is UK. Could someone tell me why it is written so?
Thanks,
Orella.
It's not always sounded. In most contexts* it's not, but before a vowel-sound it is.
*In many non-standard accents - 'rhotic accents' - it is pronounced in all phonetic contexts.
b
As far as I know a superscript "r" is not a symbol in the IPA. Wasn't it /ˈdeɪn.dʒɚ/? "ɚ" is the symbol for a rhotacized schwa (see picture).
OK, according to The sounds of English and the International Phonetic Alphabet | Antimoon.com, /əʳ/ means the same as /ɚ/.
Thank you very much.