The following tables contain the phonetic symbols [1] for the standard sounds used in English. There is one table for most vowels and one table for most consonants, as well as a third table for additional sounds. Along with each symbol, there are two example words, with the relevant sound highlighted. The first example is always a very simple word that most learners will already know. The second example is usually slightly more challenging.
Cambridge - English Pronunciation In Use Intermediate.pdf. Hi, I'm Tim and this is my pronunciation workshop. Here, I'm gonna show you how English is really spoken. It'll help you become a better listener and a more fluent speaker. Come on, let's go inside.
Perfect English Pronunciation is an English pronunciation course taught by me, Anthony, a native British English speaker. Thus, we will be focusing on British English sounds: you will learn every single English sound and will master each one so that you can sound more native-like. This course includes. Definition of document2 verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more. We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website, including to provide targeted advertising and track usage.
After each symbol, there is a link to an illustrative mp3. Each mp3 has the sound repeated three times on its own, followed by the two examples. Most browsers will play the mp3 automatically when you click the link. If you have problems, right click on the link and download the mp3. You can then listen to the example in a music player such as iTunes or WinAMP.
All examples assume standard British English pronunciation - sometimes known as “Queen’s English”, “King’s English”, “Received Pronunciation” and “BBC English”. Strangely, now that regional accents have become fashionable, BBC English is one of the few accents you are unlikely to hear from a modern BBC presenter. Americans, and other ‘colonials’, may find some examples confusing - if unsure, please listen to the mp3 for that sound. Each file is approximately 30kB - about the same as a small image.
Note that because consonant sounds are by definition whispered, it is extremely difficult to say those sounds clearly and loudly on their own. Thus, I have added an ‘-er’ or schwa sound [mp3 link] on the end of each consonant sound: I say [də][2], not [d]. Obviously when saying a word yourself, you do not add that schwa sound after every consonant! [3]
The sound, or phoneme, associated with each phonetic symbol [like those in the table below] does not change from accent to accent, or language to language, instead different symbols are used to write the different pronunciations. For example, the word “fast” has a long vowel sound in Queen’s English, but a short vowel sound in American English (and Northern British English!). Thus for King’s English, the pronunciation of “fast” is written as [faːst]; and for American English, the pronunciation of “fast” is written as [fæst].
Therefore, while your pronunciation of the example words may well differ from ours - as demonstrated on the mp3s - your pronunciation of the phonetic symbols themselves should not differ significantly from ours!
Once you can recognise the phonetic symbols, you should be able to look up and read the pronunciation of any word in any dictionary [you need to learn some extra sounds/symbols, not shown here, for many foreign languages]. [4]
vowels (including diphthongs)
ʌ up muck click for mp3 | aː hard calm click for mp3 | æ cat flagellate click for mp3 | ə away dictator click for mp3 | ɛ head emperor click for mp3 |
ɜː learn herbal click for mp3 | ɪ six imp click for mp3 | iː see evil click for mp3 | ɒ hot oxymoron click for mp3 | ɔː call awesome click for mp3 |
ʊ wood whoops! click for mp3 | uː you moody click for mp3 | aɪ I irate click for mp3 | aʊ ow! spout click for mp3 | oʊ əʊ go Mona Lisa click for mp3 |
eə air wary click for mp3 | eɪ say alien click for mp3 | ɪə ear happier click for mp3 | ɔɪ oil spoilt brat click for mp3 | ʊə tour demur click for mp3 |
consonants
b baby bonanza click for mp3 | d did dilettante click for mp3 | f fish fife click for mp3 | g gift glimmer click for mp3 | h hello hell-raiser click for mp3 |
j yes younger click for mp3 | k back capitulate click for mp3 | l leg legerdemain click for mp3 | m lemon manipulate click for mp3 | n no notorious click for mp3 |
ŋ sing humdinger click for mp3 | p pet peculiar click for mp3 | r red resistance click for mp3 | s sun sucker click for mp3 | ∫ she splash click for mp3 |
t tea telemetry click for mp3 | t∫ chess childish click for mp3 | θ think theory click for mp3 | ð mother themselves click for mp3 | v voice vex click for mp3 |
w we sweltering click for mp3 | z zoo sneeze click for mp3 | ʒ pleasure measured click for mp3 | dʒ gym jamboree click for mp3 |
additional sounds,
including those imported from other languages [5]
ɑ bâtiment [Fr.: building] pâte [Fr.: pastry] click for mp3 | ɑː barn father click for mp3 | a mari [Fr.: husband] patte [Fr.: foot, paw] click for mp3 | (ə) beaten button click for mp3[7] | e pet bébé [Fr.: baby] click for mp3 |
ɜː yurt bird click for mp3 | eː | ɛː Führe [Ger.: load] click for mp3 | ɔ boeuf [Fr.: beef] leur [Fr.: their] click for mp3 | oː Sohn [Ger.: son] click for mp3 |
øː Goethe [Ger.: a name] click for mp3 | u douce [Fr: soft.] fou [Fr.: mad] click for mp3 | ʏ | y du [Fr.: of the] pur [Fr.: pure] click for mp3 | yː grün [Ger.: green] click for mp3 |
ɛ~ fin [Fr.: end] lin [Fr.: flax, linen] click for mp3 | ɑ~ franc [Fr.: franc] clan [Fr.: clan] click for mp3 | ɔ~ bon [Fr.: good] long [Fr.: long] click for mp3 | œ~ un [Fr.: one] brun [Fr.: brown] click for mp3 | ɛə |
ɔə boar saw click for mp3 | aɪə fiery beer click for mp3 | aʊə sour bower click for mp3 | ||
(r) her fur click for mp3 | hw when whine click for mp3 | ŋɡ finger banger click for mp3 | ʎ seraglio [It.: menagerie] click for mp3 | ɲ cognac [Fr.: brandy] gnôle [Fr.: hooch] click for mp3 |
x | ç ich [Ger.: I] click for mp3 | ɣ | c baardmannetjie [Afrikans: scaley-feathered finch (Sporopipes squamifrons)] click for mp3[8] | ɥ huit [Fr.: eight] cuisine [Fr.: kitchen] click for mp3 |
[Note that phonetic symbols such as a or ʊ may be modernised to display as ɑ or u.]
more on consonants
How a consonant is articulated, or spoken, involves controlling and manipulating your breath leaving the mouth, using the lips, teeth, tongue and the interior of the mouth, as well as the speed and strength of the air flow.
Consonants are of two types, pulmonic and non-pulmonic, though most languages only include the pulmonic type. Pulmonic consonants are produced using pressurised air expelled (outward-going) from the lungs, while non-pulmonic consonants comprise ejective, implosive and click sounds. Ejective and implosive sounds use glottalic airflow, while clicks use velaric airflow.
Cross-section of the human head, labelling components of the vocal tract
Pulmonic consonants
- Place of articulation (where in the mouth a sound is made):
- Bilabial: articulated with both lips
Labiodental: articulated with both upper teeth and lower lips
Dental: articulated on or between the teeth
Alveolar: articulated with tongue tip on aveolar ridge
Postalveolar: articulated with tongue tip just behind aveolar ridge
Retroflex: articulated curling backwards
Palatal: articulated with the mid-tongue at the hard palate. The tongue is not raised
Velar: articulated with the back of the tongue on the soft palate
Uvular: articulated with the back of the tongue at the uvula
Pharyngeal: articulated with the back of the tongue and the pharynx
Glottal: articulated at the glottis (vocal chords/folds) - Method of articulation (how the breathe flow is used to make a sound):
- Plosive/oral stop: complete obstruction of mouth air flow followed by release
Nasal: complete obstruction of mouth air flow, with velum open so air can escape from nose, humming
Trill: sound from rapid vibration of one articulator against another
Tap or flap: sound made by brief but complete closure of vocal tract
Fricative: sound formed by narrowing the vocal tract esurient to make turbulent airflow
Lateral fricative: fricative with air flow centrally blocked, so escaping to the sides
Approximant: sound caused when vocal tract narrowed, but not enough to form turbulent airflow
Lateral approximant: approximant with air flow centrally blocked, so escaping to the sides
Non-pulmonic consonants
Consonants formed without pulmonic airflow. This type of consonants instead are formed with velaric airflow (clicks) or glottalic airflow (implosives and ejectives).
Velarisation[this section is a beta release]
Ielts Speaking Lesson
Velarisation is used to pronounce or supplement the pronunciation of a consonant with an articulation at the soft palate, the back of the tongue being raised towards the soft palate during the articulation of the consonant.
Examples of velarised consonants in English are the ‘l’ in milk and in build, described as a dark l. Further understanding may be helped by pronouncing alternately the consonants ‘k’ and ‘t’, where ‘k’ is velar and ‘t’ is dental . Other velar sounds are ‘g’, ‘Å‹’ and ‘x’.
More technically,
- velar is a place of articulation. It is comprised of two articulators - the active articulator, which is the back of the tongue and the passive articulator, which is the soft palate.
- Velarisation is a secondary articulation where a high back tongue position is added to a primary articulation.
- There are no velarised consonants in French.
In English, the ‘l’ in milk, described as a dark l, is a velarised consonant. The light or palatised version of ‘l’ is found in lawn.
In other languages, such as Russian and Irish [Gaeilge], velarised consonants are systematically contrasted phonemically with palatised consonants. When teaching Irish, the terms ‘slender’ describes palatial consonants and ‘wide’, velarised ones;while when teaching Russian the terms ‘soft’ describes palatial consonants and ‘hard’, velarised ones.
To be developed:
Bilabialisation
Labiodentalisation
Dentalisation
Alveolarisation
Postalveolarisation
Retroflexive
Palatalisation
Uvularisation
Labialisation
Pharyngealization
Glottalisation
British Pronunciation Lessonsielts Documents
how to add phonetic symbols to a webpage,
includes symbol descriptions
Unlike with Microsoft Word, copying and pasting these symbols into the HTML source code for your website will probably not work. To add phonetic symbols to an HTML document, you must type special “HTML entities”. An HTML entity is something that starts with an ampersand (&) and end with a semicolon (;), which browsers translate to a special character rather than displaying directly. The following table contains the HTML codes (entities) for all the symbols used above that aren’t just standard alphabetic characters. For those with older setups having trouble seeing these characters, please see here.
symbol | name & description | what to type |
---|---|---|
ː | extended sound mark | ː |
˜ | tilde (sometimes called a swung dash): in this context, this symbol indicates a nasal vowel. The tilde is frequently indicated over or across the letter concerned. | ˜ |
ʌ | carot: an upside-down ‘v’ | ʌ |
ɒ | script ‘a’ turned 180 degrees | ɒ |
æ | aelig—a-e ligature: a lowercase ‘a’ linked to a lowercase ‘e’ | æ |
ə | schwa : an ‘e’ rotated 180 degrees | ə |
ɜ | a back-to-front lowercase Greek epsilon | ɜ |
ɛ | lowercase Greek epsilon | ɛ |
ɪ | a small capital ‘i’ | ɪ |
ɔ | an ‘o’ open on the left-hand side, or a back-to-front ‘c’ | ɔ |
ʊ | an upside-down Greek capital omega | ʊ |
ŋ | engma: an ‘n’ with a ‘j’ hook at bottom right | ŋ |
∫ | esh: like the integral symbol used in mathematics | ∫ |
θ | theta: a lowercase Greek theta | θ |
ð | eth: a lowercase Greek delta with a bar through its tail | ð |
ʒ | ezh: like a stylised ‘3’ | ʒ |
ɑ | open a: script ‘a’ | ɑ |
ø | e -slash (front-rounded vowel): ‘o’ crossed by a diagonal line | ø |
ʏ | near-close near-front rounded vowel : small capital letter ‘Y’ | ʏ |
œ | o-e ligature: a lowercase ‘o’ linked to a lowercase ‘e’ | œ |
ʎ | palatal l: similar to a mirror-image lambda | ʎ |
ɲ | IPA palatal n: an ‘n’ with a ‘j’ hook at bottom left | ɲ |
ç | c cédilla: ‘c’ with a comma under the letter | ç |
ɣ | IPA gamma: similar to a lowercase Greek gamma with a looped foot | ɣ |
ɥ | front-round glide: an inverted, reversed lower-case ‘h’ | ɥ |
Ielts Pronunciation Guide
endnotes
Ielts Pronounce
There doesn’t seem to be much of a serious difference between the terms ‘phonetics’ and ‘phonics’. However, for what it is worth:
Phonics is a term from the 17th century. It is used to talk about the relationship between sound and spelling, especially when teaching English reading and spelling.
Phonetics is a term from the mid-19th century. It is used to talk about the study of speech sounds.
Some users with older operating systems and browsers may have problems seeing the phonetic symbols properly. You may for example see a box or a question mark instead of the symbol. This problem should not occur on any post-2000 operating system, such as Mac OSX, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista, etc.
For those having this problem, here is one solution. Download and install the Mozilla Firefox browser. Firefox is free and is also by far the best browser available on the market today. We would recommend using Firefox even if you did not have this problem to solve.
You will also need to install a font that contains the IPA (International Phonetics Alphabet) characters. Here for example is Lucida Sans Unicode in TTF (True-Type Font) format. Download that file and copy it to your Fonts Folder - usually C:WindowsFonts under older versions of Windows. Next open your Firefox Preferences. In the Fonts area, select 'Lucida Sans Unicode' from the dropdown. You should now be able to see phonetic characters, and many others, without difficulty.
Note that is very important when teaching reading that you do not add the ‘-er’ or schwa sound onto the end of consonants, because it will tend to confuse and cause the words to be synthesised incorrectly. For example, if you teach your child to pronounce ‘c’ as [cə] and ‘t’ as [tə], then when they try to pronounce ‘cat’, it will become [cəætə] (ker-a-ter! ...kerater), rather than [cæt] (k-a-t...kat)!
The pronunciation guides in dictionaries also have accent marks over the emphasised vowel sounds. The accent mark looks like an French acute accent, like in é.
- diphthong
- This word is not clearly defined, having several associated meanings.
In general, diphthongs occur when two vowels merge to form one combined vowel. This can also occur as you speak quickly and separate vowels run together An example of a monothong or pure vowel is heard in ‘sum’, while a a diphthong vowel is heard in ‘eye’.
The word diphthong comes originally from the ancient Greek diphthongos. It became dipthongus in Late Latin, then diptonge in Middle English and diptongue in Middle French, before ‘settling’ on diphthong. Thus, it is acceptable to say this word as dip-thong or as dif-thong.
- This page is not an explanation of the International Phonetic Alphabet [IPA] [.pdf file]. The list of sounds used here is derived from that used by the Oxford English Dictionary, to be found in the OED help file, section 6.1.1 [.pdf, page 40 of 53 onwards]. Note that the IPA includes symbols for many languages, not just those for English.
Sources for the html entities used are
•The International Phonetic Alphabet in Unicode
•Unicode Entity Codes for Phonetic Symbols, Penn State University
Entities and pronunciations were verified from
•The sounds of English and the International Phonetic Alphabet
•UCLA course in phonetics - sounds: consonants, vowels (Macromedia Flash required to hear the sounds),
as well as from personal and general knowledge.
Some background to German pronunciations. - the symbol for the “syllabic n” can also be displayed as ən. This symbol indicates that the consonant n is pronounced as a separate syllable, it sounds like a vowel. Further examples are ‘written’ and ‘listen’.
- syllabic
- of a consonant - forming a syllable by itself, as the (n) in button [buht-n] or the (l) in bottle [bot-l]
of a vowel - dominating the other sounds in a syllable; sonantal (a voiced sound).
- Many thanks to Limbic for providing this mp3 recording for the sound of this unusual syllable (and word).
- Primary and secondary articulation
- Primary articulation describes either
• the place and manner in which a stricture is made for a consonant or
• the combination of lip shape, tongue contour and larynx height used to produce a vowel. Note that a primary articulation may still allow some movement for other articulators that not involved in the formation of that primary articulation. That movement is the secondary articulation. It is no less important than the primary articulation.
Types of secondary articulation are classed as labialisation, palatalisation, velarisation, and pharyngealisation. There can also be combinations, such as labiovelarisation. Other minor types of secondary articulation are rhotacisation and faucalisation.
- Primary articulation describes either