Help:IPA English pronunciation key

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This page provides a key to the English IPA symbols used in pronunciation guides to key words in various Wikinfo articles. It is purely practical and does not make any theoretical claims about the English language.

The IPA, or International Phonetic Alphabet, is the principal international convention for transcribing the pronunciation of the world's languages, including English. For a more complete key to the IPA, see Help:IPA pronunciation key.

Since the key broadly covers standard American, English, and Australian, not all of the distinctions will be relevant to your dialect. If, for example, you pronounce cot and caught the same, you can ignore the difference between the symbols /ɒ/ and /ɔː/. Again, in many dialects /r/ is dropped except before a vowel; if you do this, simply ignore /r/ in the pronunciation guides where you would not pronounce it.

For a more precise use of the IPA to illustrate differences between English dialects, to transcribe languages other than English, or if the IPA symbols are not displayed on your browser, see the links at the bottom of this page.

Key

Consonants
IPA Examples
/p/ pen, spin, tip
/b/ but, web
/t/ two, sting, bet
/d/ do, odd
/tʃ/ chair, nature, teach
/dʒ/ gin, joy, edge
/k/ cat, kill, skin, queen, thick
/ɡ/ go, get, beg
/f/ fool, enough, leaf
/v/ voice, have
/θ/ thing, teeth
/ð/ this, breathe, father
/s/ see, city, pass
/z/ zoo, rose
/ʃ/ she, sure, emotion, leash
/ʒ/ pleasure, beige
/h/ ham, ahead
/m/ man, ham
/n/ no, tin
/ŋ/ ringer, sing, sink
/ŋɡ/ finger
/l/ left, bell
/r/ run, very[1]
/j/ yes
/w/ we
/ʍ/ what[2]
Marginal consonants
/x/ loch, Chanukkah[3]
/ʔ/ uh-oh (/ʌʔoʊ/), Hawaii[4]
Stress
/ˈ/ intonation
(/ˌɪntəˈneɪʃən/)[5]
/ˌ/
Vowels
IPA Examples
/ɪ/ bid, pit
/iː/ bead, peat[6]
/ɛ/ bed, pet
/æ/ bad, pat
/ɑː/ balm, father, pa
/ɒ/ bod, pot
/ɔː/ bawd, paw
/ʊ/ good, foot, put
/uː/ booed, food
/ʌ/ bud, putt
Diphthongs
/eɪ/ bay, hey, fate
/аɪ/ buy, high, ride, write
/aʊ/ bough, how, pout
/ɔɪ/ boy, hoy
/oʊ/ beau, hoe, poke[7]
/juː/ beauty, hue, pew, new[8]
R-colored vowels[9]
/ɪr/ mirror
/ɪər/ beer, mere
/ɛr/ berry, merry
/ɛər/ bear, mare, Mary
/ær/ barrow, marry
/ɑr/ bar, mar
/ɒr/ moral, forage
/ɔr/ born, for
/ɔər/ boar, four, more
/ʌr/ hurry, Murray
/ʊər/ boor, moor
/ɜr/ (ɝ) bird, myrrh, furry
Reduced vowels
/ɪ/ roses, business (/ˈbɪznɪs/)[10]
/ə/ Rosa’s, cuppa (/ˈkʌpə/)
/ər/ (ɚ) runners,[11] mercer (/ˈmɜrsər/)

Notes

  1. ^ Although the IPA symbol <r> represents a trill, it is widely used instead of <ɹ> in broad transcriptions of English.
  2. ^ /ʍ/ is found in some dialects, such as Scottish and Southern American English; elsewhere it's pronounced the same as /w/.
  3. ^ In most dialects, /x/ is pronounced /k/ and /h/, respectively, in these two words.
  4. ^ Most people pronounce Hawai‘i without the /ʔ/ sound.
  5. ^ It is arguable that English does not distinguish primary from secondary stress, but it is conventional to notate them as here.
  6. ^ American convention is to write /i/ when unstressed, as in wiki /ˈwɪki/ and serious /ˈsɪəriəs/; British convention is /ˈwɪkɪ/ and /ˈsɪərɪəs/.
  7. ^ </əʊ/> and </oː/> are also commonly seen. Frequently written /ɔ/ before /l/, as in bole /bɔl/.
  8. ^ In many dialects, dew /djuː/ is pronounced the same as do /duː/. This is automatic, and therefore only /djuː/ need be shown in a pronunciation guide.
  9. ^ The /r/ is silent in many dialects except between vowels. Note that due to American influence, the schwas have been left out from many Wikipedia articles. That is, /ɪər/ may not be distiguished from /ɪr/.
  10. ^ In many British dictionaries this is instead written <ɪ>, and in the American tradition <ɨ>.
  11. ^ Similarly /əl, ən, əm/ for bottle, button, rhythm,

See also

Adapted from the Wikipedia help page "Help:IPA English pronunciation key" http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Help:IPA_English_pronunciation_key&oldid=166630215 released under the GNU Free Documentation License

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