User talk:Mardhika'45

Hi I'm just another new people here. I want to ask something.There are some vowels represent the pronunciation (and shifts) in javanese language (a,i,u,e,o,ɪ,ʊ,ɛ,ɔ). And basically I understand that there are diacritical marks present in javanese to indicate the vowel shifts which basically called jejeg (upright?) and miring (slant?). We could see in the romanization as A,Å,Â,Ê,É,È,I,Ì,O,Ò,U, and Ù. But, there's one thing I don't understand. What's the difference between Å and Â ? What kind of sound do they present respectively? Thank you so much before :)

Â sound
Hi everyone I'm new here :) I would like to ask about the Â sound in javanese romanization. I understand that basically each vowel has shift. I understand that Å represents /ɔ/ sound. And I found (in Skotlami IPA though) that Â represents /ɐ/ (I've also tried to hear the sound in IPA, but I don't know whether the sound really present in Javanese. But, I suppose that Â and Å is same romanisation for basically in javanese there are ^ and ' diacritic. And I don't know if any document ever ised the 'o' diactitic like on Å. It is interesting that I've ever read (but I forget the source) that there is sound variation of that is missed and it was just one sample in that source and it seems that the world isn't really common. Please give me some explaining. Thank you very much all! :) Mardhika&#39;45 (talk) 10:46, 22 November 2016 (UTC)