Interactive IPA Chart For English Vowel & Consonants

International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), is an alphabet developed in the 19th century to accurately represent the pronunciation of languages.

Vowels

Where symbols appear in pairs, the one to the right represents a rounded vowel.

Front
Central
Back
Close
Close-mid
Open-mid
Open
i y
ɨ ʉ
ɯ u
ɪ ʏ
ʊ
e ø
ɘ ɵ
ɤ o
ə
ɛ œ
ɜ ɞ
ʌ ɔ
æ
ɐ
a ɶ
ɑ ɒ

Pulmonic Consonants

Where symbols appear in pairs, the one to the right represents a voiced consonant.

Areas shaded grey indicate articulations judged impossible.

Bi­labialLabio­dentalDentalAlveolarPost alveolarRetroflexPalatalVelarUvularPharyngealGlottal
Plosivepbtdʈɖcɟkgqɢʔ
Nasalmɱ nɳɲŋɴ
Trillʙr ʀ
Tap or Flapɾɽ
Fricativeɸβfvθðszʃʒʂʐ çʝxɣχʁħʕhɦ
Lateral Fricativeɬɮ
Approximantʋɹɻjɰ
Lateral Approximantlɭʎʟ

Non-pulmonic consonants

ClicksVoiced implosivesEjectives
ʘBilabialɓBilabialBilabial
ǀDentalɗDental/alveolarDental/alveolar
ǃ(Post)alveoalarʄPalatalVelar
ǂPalatoalveolarɠVelarAlveolar fricative
ǁAlveolar lateralʛUvular ʼetc…

Other symbols

ʍVoiceless labial-velar fricative
wVoiced labial-velar approximant
ɥVoiced labial-palatal approximant
ʜVoiceless epiglottal fricative
ʢVoiced epiglottal fricative
ʡEpiglottal plosive
ɕVoiceless alveolo-palatal fricative
ʑVoiced alveolo-palatal fricative
ɺAlveolar lateral flap
ɧSimultaneous ʃ and x
 

Affricates

t͡sVoiceless alveolar affricate
t͡ʃVoiceless palato-alveolar affricate
t͡ɕVoiceless alveolo-palatal affricate
ʈ͡ʂVoiceless retroflex affricate
d͡zVoiced alveolar affricate
d͡ʒVoiced post-alveolar affricate
d͡ʑVoiced alveolo-palatal affricate
ɖ͡ʐVoiceless retroflex affricate
IPA Chart For English Vowel & Consonants



What is IPA Chart

International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), is an alphabet developed in the 19th century to accurately represent the pronunciation of languages. One aim of the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) was to provide a unique symbol for each distinctive sound in a language—that is, every sound, or phoneme, that serves to distinguish one word from another.

Phonemic transcription (sometimes called broad transcription) is a code for the significantly different sounds in a specific language. Sounds are often pronounced slightly differently in different contexts but they are perceived as the same by native speakers and are written the same in phonemic script.

The concept of the IPA was first broached by Otto Jespersen in a letter to Paul Passy of the International Phonetic Association and was developed by A.J. Ellis, Henry Sweet, Daniel Jones, and Passy in the late 19th century. Its creators’ intent was to standardize the representation of spoken language, thereby sidestepping the confusion caused by the inconsistent conventional spellings used in every language. The IPA was also intended to supersede the existing multitude of individual transcription systems. It was first published in 1888 and was revised several times in the 20th and 21st centuries. The International Phonetic Association is responsible for the alphabet and publishes a chart summarizing it.

The IPA primarily uses Roman characters. Other letters are borrowed from different scripts (e.g., Greek) and are modified to conform to the Roman style. Diacritics are used for fine distinctions in sounds and to show nasalization of vowels, length, stress, and tones.

The IPA can be used for broad and narrow transcription. For example, in English, there is only one t sound distinguished by native speakers. Therefore, only one symbol is needed in a broad transcription to indicate every t sound. If there is a need to transcribe narrowly in English, diacritical marks can be added to indicate that the t’s in the words tap, pat, and stem differ slightly in pronunciation.

The IPA did not become the universal system for phonetic transcription that its designers had intended, and it is used less commonly in America than in Europe. Despite its acknowledged shortcomings, it is widely employed by linguists and in dictionaries, though often with some modifications. The IPA is also used by singers.

MPhil in ELE, Kathmandu University, Writer & Researcher in Education, SEO Practitioner & ICT enthusiast.

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