Jump to content

Eau (trigraph)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 78.55.226.35 (talk) at 17:04, 6 June 2017. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Eau is a trigraph of the Latin script.

French

In Modern French, ⟨eau⟩ is pronounced /o/ and may or may not be the same phoneme as the one attached to the letter o.

It is used as an ending for several words, like berceau (cradle) or manteau (coat), usually being the remnant of a suffix (bercer meaning to cradle; mante meaning mantle). This is also a word by itself: eau means water.

English

In English, ⟨eau⟩ only exists in words imported from French, and so is pronounced likewise in almost all cases. The only exceptions to this are beauty and words derived from it (excepting plain beau), where it is pronounced /juː/, bureaucrat where it is pronounced /ə/, and bureaucracy where it is pronounced /ɑ/.