From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Philippe Verdy

> This arc is a true phonetic mark of a contextual elision...

> Exactly similar to other phonetic symbols like the elision tie

There are two kinds of arc shown in the image:

- arcs that span a space
- arcs that span a range of letters

Whether or not there is notation similar to the latter in IPA or other phonetic 
notations is irrelevant to the question of whether it is to be represented as 
plain text: even if a phonetic notation does graphically mark spans of text in 
certain cases, the fact that it is phonetic notation does not imply that it is, 
therefore, appropriate for that particular convention to be representable in 
plain text. 

Note that UTR 20 discusses semantic and presentation effects that are suitable 
for representation as characters versus markup and makes the point that, in 
XML, effects that involve spans of text should be represented using markup 
rather than characters that set and unset state. Those are, of course, 
recommendations about a markup language, not plain text. But the argument used 
works in both directions: things that involve spans of text are best handled as 
markup, while things that are very local (e.g. spanning no more than a grapheme 
cluster) may be more suitable for representation as characters.



Peter




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