Template:IPAc-en

From English Penguinapedia

The pronunciation of English words in Wikipedia is given in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) using the following transcription, which is not specific to any one dialect. To compare these symbols with non-IPA American dictionary conventions you may be more familiar with, see pronunciation respelling for English, which lists the pronunciation guides of fourteen English dictionaries published in the United States. For a basic introduction to IPA, see Wikipedia:IPA/Introduction. If you feel it is necessary to add a pronunciation respelling, please use the conventions of Wikipedia's pronunciation respelling key.

To compare these symbols with dictionary IPA conventions you may be more familiar with, see Help:IPA conventions for English, which lists the conventions of eight English dictionaries published in Britain, Australia, and the United States. For a more complete key to the IPA, see Wikipedia:IPA, which includes sounds that do not occur in English. If the IPA symbols do not display properly on your browser, see the links at the bottom of this page.

Understanding the key
This key accommodates standard General American, Received Pronunciation, Canadian English, South African English, Australian English, and New Zealand English pronunciations. Therefore, not all of the distinctions shown here will be relevant to your dialect. If, for example, you pronounce cot Template:IPA and caught Template:IPA the same, you can simply ignore the difference between the symbols Template:IPA and Template:IPA, just as you ignore the distinction between the written vowels o and au when pronouncing them.

In many dialects Template:IPA occurs only before a vowel; if you speak such a dialect, simply ignore Template:IPA in the pronunciation guides where you would not pronounce it, as in cart Template:IPA. In other dialects, Template:IPA (a y sound) cannot occur after Template:IPA, Template:IPA, Template:IPA etc. in the same syllable; if you speak such a dialect, ignore the Template:IPA in transcriptions such as new Template:IPA.

For example, New York is transcribed Template:IPA. For most people from England, and for some New Yorkers, the Template:IPA in Template:IPA is not pronounced and can be ignored; for most people from the United States, including some New Yorkers, the Template:IPA in Template:IPA is not pronounced and can be ignored.

On the other hand, there are some distinctions which you might make but which this key does not encode, as they are seldom reflected in the dictionaries used as sources for Wikipedia articles. Examples include the difference between the vowels of fir, fur and fern in Scottish and Irish English, the vowels of bad and had in many parts of Australia and the Eastern United States, and the vowels of spider and spied her in some parts of Scotland and North America.

Other words may have different vowels depending on the speaker. Bath, for example, originally had the Template:IPA vowel of cat, but for many speakers it now has the Template:IPA vowel of father. Such words are transcribed twice, once for each pronunciation: Template:IPA.

The IPA stress mark (Template:IPA) comes before the syllable that has the stress, in contrast to stress marking in pronunciation keys of some dictionaries published in the United States.

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