Diacritics
|
Name
|
Notes
|
km| ំ}។}
|
nĭkkôhĕt (និគ្គហិត)
|
niggahita; nasalizes the inherent vowels and some of the dependent vowels, see anusvara, sometimes used to represent [aɲ] in Sanskrit loanwords
|
ះ
|
reăhmŭkh (រះមុខ)
|
"shining face"; adds final aspiration to dependent or inherent vowels, usually omitted, corresponds to the visarga diacritic, it maybe included as dependent vowel symbol
|
ៈ
|
yŭkôleăkpĭntŭ (យុគលពិន្ទុ)
|
yugalabindu ("pair of dots"); adds final glottalness to dependent or inherent vowels, usually omitted
|
៉
|
musĕkâtônd (មូសិកទន្ត)
|
mūsikadanta ("mouse teeth"); used to convert some o-series consonants to the a-series
|
៊
|
reisâpt (ត្រីសព្ទ)
|
trīsabda; used to convert some a-series consonants to the o-series
|
ុ
|
kbiĕh kraôm (ក្បៀសក្រោម)
|
also known as bŏkcheung (បុកជើង); used in place when the diacritics treisâpt and musĕkâtônd impede with superscript vowels
|
់
|
bântăk (បន្តក់)
|
used to shorten some vowels
|
៌
|
rôbat (របាទ) répheăk (រេផៈ)
|
rapāda, repha; behave similarly to the tôndâkhéat, corresponds to the Devanagari diacritic repha, however it lost its original function which was to represent a vocalic r
|
៍
|
tôndâkhéat (ទណ្ឌឃាដ)
|
daṇḍaghāta; used to render some letters as unpronounced
|
៎
|
kakâbat (កាកបាទ)
|
kākapāda ("crow's foot"); more a punctuation mark than a diacritic; used in writing to indicate the rising intonation of an exclamation or interjection; often placed on particles such as /na/, /nɑː/, /nɛː/, /vəːj/, and the feminine response /cah/
|
៏
|
âsda (អស្តា)
|
denotes stressed intonation in some single-consonant words[១]
|
័
|
sanhyoŭk sannha (សំយោគសញ្ញា)
|
represents a short inherent vowel in Sanskrit and Pali words; usually omitted
|
៑
|
vĭréam (វិរាម)
|
a mostly obsolete diacritic, corresponds to the virāma
|
្
|
cheung (ជើង)
|
a.w. coeng; a sign developed for Unicode to input subscript consonants, appearance of this sign varies among fonts
|