| Language |
Word |
IPA |
Meaning |
Notes |
| Afrikaans |
Standard | bed |
[bet] |
'bed' |
Typically transcribed in IPA with ⟨ɛ⟩. The height varies between close-mid [e] and mid [ɛ̝]. See Afrikaans phonology |
| Arabic |
Standard |
مَجۡر۪ىٰهَا/majrēhā |
[mad͡ʒ.reː.haː] |
|
See imalah |
| Azerbaijani |
gecə |
[ɟeˈd͡ʒæ] |
'night' |
|
| Bengali |
ভেজা |
[bʱdʒɐ] |
'wet' |
See Bengali phonology |
| Bavarian |
Amstetten dialect[3] |
[example needed] |
|
|
|
| Breton |
eget[4] |
[eˈɡet] | 'than' |
|
| Catalan |
séc |
[ˈsek] |
'fold' |
See Catalan phonology |
| Chinese |
Shanghainese |
该/kè |
[ke̠ʔ˩] |
'should' |
Near-front; realization of /ɛ/, which appears only in open syllables. Phonetically, it is nearly identical to /ɪ/ ([ɪ̞]), which appears only in closed syllables. |
| Chuvash |
эрешмен/ereşmen |
[erɛʃ'mɛnʲ] |
'spider' |
|
| Danish |
Standard |
hæl |
[ˈheːˀl] |
'heel' |
Typically transcribed in IPA with ⟨ɛː⟩. See Danish phonology |
| Dutch |
Belgian |
vreemd |
[vreːmt] |
'strange' |
In the Netherlands often diphthongized to [eɪ]. See Dutch phonology |
| English |
Australian |
bed |
[bed] |
'bed' |
See Australian English phonology |
| New Zealand | The height varies from near-close in broad varieties to mid in the Cultivated variety. See New Zealand English phonology |
| General American |
may |
[meː] |
'may' |
Most often a closing diphthong [eɪ]. |
| General Indian |
Realized closer to [j̚e]. |
| General Pakistani |
Can be a diphthong [eɪ] instead, depending on speaker. |
| Geordie |
|
| Scottish |
|
| Singaporean |
|
| Ulster[18] |
Pronounced [ɛː~iə] in Belfast. |
| Some Cardiff speakers |
square |
[skweː] |
'square' |
More often open-mid [ɛː]. |
| Scouse[20] |
May (less commonly) be less open [ɪː] or more open [ɛː] instead[21] |
| Scottish |
bit |
[bë̞ʔ] |
'bit' |
Near-front, may be [ɪ] (also [ə]) instead for other speakers. |
| Cockney |
bird |
[bɛ̝̈ːd] |
'bird' |
Near-front; occasional realization of /ɜː/. It can be rounded [œ̝ː] or, more often, unrounded central [ɜ̝ː] instead. Typically transcribed in IPA with ⟨ɜː⟩. |
| Estonian | keha |
[ˈkeɦɑ̝ˑ] |
'body' |
See Estonian phonology |
| French |
beauté |
[bot̪e] |
'beauty' |
See French phonology |
| German |
Standard |
Seele |
[ˈzeːlə]ⓘ |
'soul' |
See Standard German phonology |
| Many speakers |
Jäger |
[ˈjeːɡɐ] |
'hunter' |
Outcome of the /ɛː–eː/ merger found universally in Northern Germany, Eastern Germany and Eastern Austria (often even in formal speech) and in some other regions. See Standard German phonology |
| Southern accents |
Bett |
[b̥et] |
'bed' |
Common realization of /ɛ/ in Southern Germany, Switzerland and Austria. See Standard German phonology |
| Swabian accent |
Contrasts with the open-mid [ɛ]. See Standard German phonology |
| Greek |
Sfakian |
[example needed] |
|
|
Corresponds to mid [e̞] in Modern Standard Greek. See Modern Greek phonology |
| Hebrew |
כן/ken |
[ke̞n] |
'yes' |
Hebrew vowels are not shown in the script, see Niqqud and Modern Hebrew phonology |
| Hindustani |
Hindi |
के/ke |
[keː] |
'of' |
See Hindustani phonology |
| Urdu |
کے/ke |
| Hungarian |
hét |
[heːt̪] |
'seven' |
Also described as mid [e̞ː]. See Hungarian phonology |
| Italian |
Standard |
stelle |
[ˈs̪t̪elle] |
'stars' |
See Italian phonology |
| Khmer |
ទុរេន / turen |
[tureːn] |
'durian' |
See Khmer phonology |
| Korean |
메아리 / meari |
[meɐɾi] |
'echo' |
See Korean phonology |
| Limburgish |
Most dialects |
leef |
[leːf] |
'dear' |
The example word is from the Maastrichtian dialect. |
| Lithuanian |
tėtė |
[t̪eːt̪eː] |
'father' |
'Tete' and 'tėtis' are more commonly used than 'tėtė.' |
| Malay |
kecil |
[kə.t͡ʃel] |
'small' |
Allophone of /i/ in closed-final syllables. May be [ɪ] or [e̞] depending on the speaker. See Malay phonology |
| Malayalam |
ചെവി/čevi |
[ȶ͡ɕeʋi] |
'ear' |
See Malayalam phonology |
| Marathi |
एक/ek |
[e:k] |
'one' |
See Marathi phonology |
| Norwegian |
le |
[leː] |
'laugh' |
The example word is from Urban East Norwegian. See Norwegian phonology |
| Mpade | faɗe | [faɗe] | 'night' | |
| Persian |
سه/se |
[se] |
'three' |
|
| Polish |
dzień |
[d͡ʑeɲ̟]ⓘ |
'day' |
Allophone of /ɛ/ between palatal or palatalized consonants. See Polish phonology |
| Portuguese |
mesa |
[ˈmezɐ] |
'table' |
See Portuguese phonology |
| Romanian |
umple |
[ˈumple] |
'to fill' |
See Romanian phonology |
| Russian |
шея/šeja |
[ˈʂejə]ⓘ |
'neck' |
Close-mid [e] before and between soft consonants, mid [e̞] after soft consonants. See Russian phonology |
| Saterland Frisian |
tään |
[te̠ːn] |
'thin' |
Near-front; typically transcribed in IPA with ⟨ɛː⟩. Phonetically, it is nearly identical to /ɪ/ ([ɪ̞]). The vowel typically transcribed in IPA with ⟨eː⟩ is actually near-close [e̝ː]. |
| Slovene |
sedem |
[ˈsèːdəm] |
'seven' |
See Slovene phonology |
| Sotho |
ho jwetsa |
[hʊ̠ʒʷet͡sʼɑ̈] |
'to tell' |
Contrasts close, near-close and close-mid front unrounded vowels. See Sotho phonology |
| Swedish |
Central Standard[48] |
se |
[s̪eː] |
'see' |
Often diphthongized to [eə̯] (hear the word: [s̪eə̯]ⓘ). See Swedish phonology |
| Tahitian |
vahine |
[vahine] |
'woman' |
|
| Tamil |
செவி/čevi |
[ȶ͡ɕeʋi] |
'ear' |
See Tamil phonology |
| Ukrainian |
ефі́рний efirný |
[eˈfirnɪj] |
'ethereal' |
See Ukrainian phonology |
| Welsh |
chwech |
[χweːχ] |
'six' |
See Welsh phonology |
| Yoruba | [example needed] | | | |