Wikipedia:IPA for English

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The pronunciation of English words in Wikipedia is most often given in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). The goal is that interpretation should not depend on the reader's dialect, and therefore a broad transcription is generally used.

For a more complete key to the IPA, which covers sounds that do not occur in English, see Wikipedia:IPA.

Since this key accommodates standard American, British, and Australian pronunciations, not all of the distinctions shown here 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/. In many dialects /r/ occurs only before a vowel; if you speak such a dialect, simply ignore /r/ in the pronunciation guides where you would not pronounce it.

On the other hand, this key does not encode the difference between the vowels of bad and lad in Australian English, nor between those of fir, fur, and fern in Scottish English, as those distinctions are seldom made in the dictionaries used as sources for Wikipedia articles.

The IPA stress mark (ˈ) comes before the syllable that has the stress, in contrast to some other methods of describing pronunciation used in English dictionaries.

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 in the box to the right and at the bottom of this page.

Key

Consonants
IPA Examples
b buy, web
d die, odd
ð thy, breathe, father
giant, joy, edge
f fire, enough, leaf, photo
ɡ[1] guy, get, beg
h high, ahead
j yes, hallelujah
k kye, sky, thick
l lie, sly, bell
m my, smile, ham
n nigh, snide, tin
ŋ ringer, sing, sink
ŋɡ finger
θ thigh, teeth
p pie, spy, tip
r rye, shrine, very[2]
s sigh, city, pass, scissors
ʃ shy, sure, emotion, leash, session
t tie, sty, bet
China, nature, teach
v vile, have
w wye, swine
hw why[3]
z Zion, rose
ʒ pleasure, vision, beige[4]
Marginal consonants
x ugh, loch, Chanukah[5]
ʔ uh-oh /ˈʌʔoʊ/,
Hawaii /həˈwaɪʔiː/[6]
Vowels
IPA Examples R-colored vowels[7]
æ bat, bad, shall, ban ær barrow, marry
ɑː balm, father, bra ɑr bar, mar, party, starring (/ɑːr/)
ɒ bot, pod, John, doll[8] ɒr moral, forage
ɔː bawd, caught, dawn, ball, straw[9] ɔr born, for, aural (/ɔːr/)
code, boat, goal, bone, go[10] ɔər boar, four, more, oral (/oʊr/)[11]
ʊ good, foot, pull ʊər boor, moor, tourist (/uːr/)[12]
food, lute, fool, soon, blue
ʌ bud, but, dull, gun ʌr hurry, Murray
ɜr bird, myrrh, furry (also /ɝː/)[13]
ɛ bed, pet, bell, men ɛr berry, merry
fade, fate, fail, vein, pay ɛər bear, mare, Mary (/eɪr/)
ɪ bid, pit, bill, bin ɪr mirror
bead, peat, feel, mean, sea ɪər beer, mere, serious (/iːr/)
Traditional diphthongs
ride, write, file, fine, pie ɔɪ void, exploit, foil, coin, boy
out, loud, owl, down, how juː cute, hue, pew, dew[14]
Reduced vowels
ə Rosa’s, a mission ən button
i happy, serious[15] əm rhythm
ɨ, ɪ roses, emission [16] əl bottle
ʊ curriculum ([jʊ])[17] ər perform, mercer (also /ɚ/)[13]
ɵ following, omission[18]
Stress Syllabification
IPA Examples IPA Examples
ˈ intonation /ˌɪntɵˈneɪʃən/,[19]
battleship /ˈbætəlʃɪp/[20]
. shellfish /ˈʃel.fɪʃ/, selfish /ˈself.ɨʃ/
nitrate /ˈnaɪ.treɪt/, night-rate /ˈnaɪt.reɪt/
moai /ˈmoʊ.aɪ/[21]
ˌ
Wikipedia:IPA
Wikipedia:IPA for Arabic
Wikipedia:IPA for Armenian
Wikipedia:IPA for Catalan and Occitan
Wikipedia:IPA for Czech and Slovak
Wikipedia:IPA for English
Wikipedia:IPA for Estonian and Finnish
Wikipedia:IPA for French
Wikipedia:IPA for German
Wikipedia:IPA for Hebrew
Wikipedia:IPA for Hungarian
Wikipedia:IPA for Irish
Wikipedia:IPA for Italian
Wikipedia:IPA for Japanese
Wikipedia:IPA for Korean
Wikipedia:IPA for Mandarin
Wikipedia:IPA for Polish
Wikipedia:IPA for Portuguese
Wikipedia:IPA for Romanian
Wikipedia:IPA for Russian
Wikipedia:IPA for Scottish Gaelic
Wikipedia:IPA for Serbian and Croatian
Wikipedia:IPA for Spanish
Wikipedia:IPA for Swedish and Norwegian
Wikipedia:IPA for Vietnamese
Wikipedia:IPA for Welsh

Notes

  1. ^ If the two characters ɡ and do not match, if the first looks like a γ, then you have an issue with your default font. See Rendering issues.
  2. ^ Although the IPA symbol [r] represents a trill, /r/ is widely used instead of /ɹ/ in broad transcriptions of English.
  3. ^ /hw/ is not distinguished from /w/ in dialects with the wine-whine merger, such as RP and most varieties of GenAm.
  4. ^ A number of English words, such as genre and garage, are pronounced with either /ʒ/ or /dʒ/.
  5. ^ In most dialects, /x/ is replaced by /k/ in loch and by /h/ in Chanukah.
  6. ^ Most people pronounce the English word Hawaii without the /ʔ/ (glottal stop) that occurs in the Hawaiian word Hawai‘i.
  7. ^ In non-rhotic accents such as RP, /r/ not pronounced unless followed by a vowel. In Wikipedia articles, /ɪər/ etc. are not always distinguished from /ɪr/ etc. When they are, the long vowels may be transcribed /iːr/ etc. by analogy with vowels not followed by /r/.
  8. ^ /ɒ/ is not distinguished from /ɑː/ in dialects with the father-bother merger such as GenAm.
  9. ^ /ɔː/ is not distinguished from /ɑː/ (except before /r/) in dialects with the cot-caught merger such as some varieties of GenAm.
  10. ^ Commonly transcribed /əʊ/ or /oː/.
  11. ^ /ɔər/ is not distinguished from /ɔr/ in dialects with the horse-hoarse merger, which include most dialects of modern English.
  12. ^ /ʊər/ is not distinguished from /ɔr/ in dialects with the pour-poor merger, including many younger speakers.
  13. ^ a b In some articles these are transcribed /ɝː/ and /ɚ/ when not followed by a vowel.
  14. ^ In many dialects, /juː/ is pronounced the same as /uː/ after "tongue sounds" (/t/, /d/, /s/, /z/, /n/, /θ/, and /l/), so that dew /djuː/ is pronounced the same as do /duː/.
  15. ^ Pronounced /iː/ in dialects with the happy tensing, /ɪ/ in other dialects. British convention used to transcribe it with /ɪ/, but the OED and other influential dictionaries recently converted to /i/.
  16. ^ Pronounced [ə] in Australian and many US dialects, and [ɪ] in Received Pronunciation. Many speakers freely alternate between a reduced [ɪ̈] and a reduced [ə]. Many phoneticians (vd. Olive & Greenwood 1993:322) and the OED uses the pseudo-IPA symbol ɪ [1], and Merriam Webster uses ə̇.
  17. ^ Pronounced [ʊ] in many dialects, [ə] in others. Many speakers freely alternate between a reduced [ʊ̈] and a reduced [ə]. The OED uses the pseudo-IPA symbol ʊ [2].
  18. ^ Pronounced [ə] in many dialects, and [ɵw] or [əw] before another vowel, as in cooperate. Sometimes pronounced as a full /oʊ/, especially in careful speech. (Bolinger 1989)
  19. ^ It is arguable that there is no phonemic distinction in English between primary and secondary stress (vd. Ladefoged 1993), but it is conventional to notate them as here.
  20. ^ Full vowels after a stressed syllable, such as the ship in battleship, are marked with secondary stress in some dictionaries (Merriam-Webster), but not in others (the OED). Such syllables are not actually stressed.
  21. ^ Syllables are indicated sparingly, where necessary to avoid confusion.

See also

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