A
phoneme of a language or dialect is an
abstraction of a
speech sound or of a group of different sounds that are all perceived to have the same function by speakers of that particular language or dialect. For example, the English word
through consists of three phonemes: the initial "th" sound, the "r" sound, and a vowel sound. The phonemes in that and many other English words do not always correspond directly to the letters used to spell them (
English orthography is not as strongly
phonemic as that of many other languages). The number and distribution of phonemes in English vary from dialect to dialect, and also depend on the interpretation of the individual researcher. The number of consonant phonemes is generally put at 24 (or slightly more depending on the dialect). The number of vowels is subject to greater variation; in the system presented on this page there are 20–25 vowel phonemes in
Received Pronunciation, 14–16 in
General American and 19–21 in
Australian English. The pronunciation keys used in dictionaries generally contain a slightly greater number of symbols than this, to take account of certain sounds used in foreign words and certain noticeable distinctions that may not bestrictly speakingphonemic.
Consonants The following table shows the 24 consonant phonemes found in most dialects of English, plus , whose distribution is more limited.
Fortis consonants are always
voiceless,
aspirated in
syllable onset (except in clusters beginning with or ), and sometimes also
glottalized to an extent in
syllable coda (most likely to occur with , see
T-glottalization), while lenis consonants are always
unaspirated and un-glottalized, and generally partially or fully
voiced. The alveolars are usually
apical, i.e. pronounced with the tip of the tongue touching or approaching the roof of the mouth, though some speakers produce them
laminally, i.e. with the blade of the tongue.
Consonant examples The following table shows typical examples of the occurrence of the above consonant phonemes in words, using
minimal pairs where possible.
Sonorants • The pronunciation of varies by dialect: • Received Pronunciation has two main allophones of : the clear, or plain, (the "light L"), and the
dark, or
velarized, (the "dark L"). The clear variant is used before vowels when they are in the same syllable, and the dark variant when the precedes a consonant or is in syllable-final position before silence. • In South Wales, Ireland, and the Caribbean, is usually clear, and in North Wales, Scotland, Australia, and New Zealand it is usually dark. • In General American and Canada, is generally dark, but to varying degrees: before stressed vowels it is neutral or only slightly velarized. In southern U.S. accents it is noticeably clear between vowels, and in some other positions. • In urban accents of Southern England, as well as New Zealand and some parts of the United States, can be pronounced as an approximant or
semivowel () at the end of a syllable (
l-vocalization). • Depending on dialect, has at least the following allophones in varieties of English around the world (see
Pronunciation of English /r/): •
postalveolar approximant (the most common realization of the phoneme, occurring in most dialects, RP and General American included) •
retroflex approximant (occurs in most Irish dialects and some American dialects) •
labiodental approximant (occurs in south-east England and some London accents; also in
Singapore English among younger speakers. See
r-labialization) •
alveolar flap (occurs in most Scottish, Welsh,
Indian and some South African dialects, some conservative dialects in England and Ireland; not to be confused with
flapping of and ) •
alveolar trill (occurs in some very conservative Scottish dialects and some
Indian,
South African and Welsh accents) •
voiced uvular fricative (occurs in northern Northumbria, largely disappeared; known as the
Northumbrian burr) • In most dialects is
labialized in many positions, as in
reed and
tree ; in the latter case, the may be slightly labialized as well. • In some
rhotic accents, such as General American, when not followed by a vowel is realized as an
r-coloring of the preceding vowel or its coda:
nurse ,
butter . • The distinctions between the nasals are
neutralized in some environments. For example, before a final , or there is nearly always only one nasal sound that can appear in each case: , or respectively (as in the words
limp,
lint,
linknote that the
n of
link is pronounced ). This effect can even occur across syllable or word boundaries, particularly in stressed syllables:
synchrony is pronounced whereas
synchronic may be pronounced with either or . For other possible syllable-final combinations, see in the Phonotactics section below.
Obstruents In most dialects, the fortis stops and affricate have various different allophones, and are distinguished from the lenis stops and affricate by several phonetic features. • The allophones of the fortes include: •
aspirated when they occur in the onset of a
stressed syllable, as in
potato. In clusters involving a following liquid, the aspiration typically manifests as the devoicing of this liquid. These sounds are unaspirated after within the same syllable, as in
stan, span, scan, and at the ends of syllables, as in
mat,
map,
mac. The voiceless fricatives are nearly always unaspirated, but a notable exception is English-speaking areas of Wales, where they are often aspirated. An alternative interpretation of the /s/–stop clusters is that all stops following /s/ are in fact lenis: this is the interpretation favoured by Dr
Geoff Lindsey. Taking this analysis as axiomatic,
stan [stan],
span [span], and
scan [skan] would thus be notated /sdan, sban, sgan/. Moreover, English fortis stops are not only aspirated, but often somewhat affricated; in the case of
mat,
map,
mac therefore, the contrast between lenis and fortis is preserved through the affrication, when the stops are realised ‘fully’, rather than glottalised or otherwise reduced: . • In many accents of English, fortis stops are
glottalized in some positions. That may be heard either as a glottal stop preceding the oral closure ("pre-glottalization" or "glottal reinforcement") or as a substitution of the glottal stop for the oral stop (glottal replacement). can be only pre-glottalized. Pre-glottalization normally occurs in British and American English when the fortis consonant phoneme is followed by another consonant or when the consonant is in final position. Thus
football and
catching are often pronounced and , respectively. Even more frequently, glottal replacement happens in such cases involving , so that
football is pronounced . In addition, however, glottal replacement is increasingly common in British English when occurs between vowels if the preceding vowel is stressed; thus
better is often pronounced by younger speakers as . Such
t-glottalization also occurs in many British regional accents, including
Cockney, where it can also occur at the end of words, and where and are sometimes treated the same way. • For some RP-speakers, final voiceless stops, especially , may become ejectives. • Among stops, both fortes and lenes: • May have
no audible release in the word-final position. These allophones are more common in North America than Great Britain. • Almost always have a masked release before another plosive or affricate (as in ''
), i.e. the release of the first stop is made after the closure of the second stop. This also applies when the following stop is homorganic (articulated in the same place), as in to
p player''. A notable exception is
Welsh English in which stops are usually released in that environment. • The affricates have a mandatory fricative release in all environments. • Very often in the United States and Canada and less frequently in Australia and New Zealand, both can be
pronounced as a voiced flap in certain positions: when they come between a preceding stressed vowel (possibly with intervening ) and precede an unstressed vowel or
syllabic . Examples include
water,
bottle,
petal, ''
(the last two words sound alike when flapped). The flap may even appear at word boundaries, as in pu
t i
t on
. When the combination appears in such positions, some American speakers pronounce it as a nasalized flap that may become indistinguishable from , so winter
may be pronounced similarly or identically to winner'' . •
Yod-coalescence is a process that
palatalizes the
clusters , , and into , , and respectively, frequently occurring with clusters that would be considered to span a syllable boundary. • Yod-coalescence in stressed syllables, such as in
tune and
dune, occurs in
Australian,
Cockney,
Estuary English,
Hiberno-English (some speakers),
Newfoundland English,
South African English, and to a certain extent in
New Zealand English and
Scottish English (many speakers). This can lead to additional homophony; for instance,
dew and
due come to be pronounced the same as
Jew. • In certain varieties such as
Australian English, South African English, and New Zealand English, and in stressed syllables can coalesce into and , respectively. In Australian English for example,
assume is pronounced by some speakers. Furthermore, some British, Canadian, American, New Zealand and Australian speakers may change the sound to before ; for example, these speakers pronounce
strewn as . • The
postalveolar consonants are strongly
labialized: . • In addition to , the sequences also have affricate-like realizations in certain positions (as in
cats, roads, tram, dram, eighth, behind them, cupful, obvious; see also ), but usually only are considered to constitute the monophonemic affricates of English because (among other reasons) only they are found in all of morpheme-initial, -internal, and -final positions, and native speakers typically perceive them as single units.
Vowels English, much like other Germanic languages, has a particularly large number of vowel phonemes, and in addition the
vowels of English differ considerably between dialects. Consequently, corresponding vowels may be transcribed with various symbols depending on the dialect under consideration. When considering English as a whole,
lexical sets are often used, each named by a word containing the vowel or vowels in question. For example, the set consists of words which, like
lot, have in British
Received Pronunciation (RP) and in
General American (GA). The " vowel" then refers to the vowel that appears in those words in whichever dialect is being considered, or (at a greater level of
abstraction) to a
diaphoneme, which represents this interdialectal correspondence. A commonly used system of lexical sets, devised by
John C. Wells, is presented below; for each set, the corresponding phonemes are given for RP and General American, using the notation that will be used on this page. For a table that shows the pronunciations of these vowels in a wider range of English accents, see
Sound correspondences between English accents. The following tables show the vowel phonemes of three standard varieties of English. The notation system used here for Received Pronunciation (RP) is fairly standard; the others less so. The feature descriptions given here (back, open, etc.) are abstracted somewhat; the actual pronunciations of these vowels are somewhat more accurately conveyed by the
IPA symbols used (see
Vowel for a chart indicating the meanings of these symbols; though note also the points listed below the following tables). The symbols given in the table are traditional but redirect to their modern implementation. The differences between these tables can be explained as follows: • RP and General American divide words among the , , , and sets separately from one another; RP has the phonemes (), ( and ), and (); whereas General American has the phonemes ( and ) and ( and ). In a few North American accents, namely in
Eastern New England (
Boston) words do not have the vowel of (the
father–bother merger has not occurred) but instead merge with . • Although the notation is used for the vowel of in RP and General American, the actual pronunciation in RP may be closer to a near-open central vowel , especially among older speakers. In modern RP, this vowel is increasingly realized as to avoid the clash with the lowered variety of in the region (the
trap–strut merger). In General American, is realized as . • RP transcriptions use rather than largely for convenience and historical tradition; it does not necessarily represent a different sound from the General American phoneme, as the vowel is generally realized as in modern RP. • The different notations used for the vowel of in RP and General American ( and ) reflect a difference in the most common phonetic realizations of that vowel. • The triphthongs given in the RP table are usually regarded as sequences of two phonemes (a diphthong plus ); however, in RP, these sequences frequently undergo
smoothing into single diphthongs or even monophthongs. • The different notations used here for some of the Australian vowels reflect the phonetic realization of those vowels in Australian: a central rather than in , a more closed rather than in , a close-mid rather than traditional RP's in , an open-mid rather than traditional RP's in , an opener rather than somewhat closer in , a central rather a back in and , and somewhat different pronunciations of most of the diphthongs. Note that central in , close-mid in and open-mid in are standard realizations in modern RP and the difference between modern RP and Australian English in these vowels lies almost only in transcription, rather than pronunciation. • Both Australian and RP are long monophthongs, the difference between them being in tongue height: Australian is close-mid , whereas the corresponding RP vowel is open-mid . Other points to be noted are these: • The vowel is generally pronounced more open, approaching , by modern RP speakers. • The vowel is often pronounced in open syllables. • The and diphthongs may be pronounced with a less open starting point when followed by a
voiceless consonant; this is chiefly a feature of Canadian speech (
Canadian raising), but is also found in parts of the United States. Thus
writer may be distinguished from
rider even when
flapping causes the and to be pronounced identically.
Unstressed syllables Unstressed syllables in English may contain almost any vowel, but in practice vowels in stressed and unstressed syllables tend to use different inventories of phonemes. In particular, long vowels are used less often in unstressed syllables than stressed syllables. Additionally there are certain soundscharacterized by
central position and weaknessthat are particularly often found as the nuclei of unstressed syllables. These include: •
schwa, , as in and (in non-rhotic dialects) (
– merger); also in many other positions such as
about, ''
, padd
ock'', etc. This sound is essentially restricted to unstressed syllables exclusively. In the approach presented here it is identified as a phoneme , although other analyses do not have a separate phoneme for schwa and regard it as a reduction or neutralization of other vowels in syllables with the lowest degree of stress. •
r-colored schwa, , as in in General American and some other rhotic dialects, which can be identified with the underlying sequence . •
syllabic consonants: as in
bottle, as in
button, as in
rhythm. These may be phonemized either as a plain consonant or as a schwa followed by a consonant; for example
button may be represented as or (see above under
Consonants). • , as in
roses and
making. This can be identified with the phoneme , although in unstressed syllables it may be pronounced more centrally, and for some speakers (particularly in Australian and New Zealand and some American English) it is merged with in these syllables (
weak vowel merger). Among speakers who retain the distinction there are many cases where
free variation between and is found, as in the second syllable of
typical. (The
OED has recently adopted the symbol to indicate such cases.) • , as in ''
, t
oday
, for which similar considerations apply as in the case of . (The symbol is sometimes used in these cases, similarly to .) Some speakers may also have a rounded schwa, , used in words like omission'' . • , as in
happy,
coffee, in many dialects (others have in this position). The phonemic status of this is not easy to establish. Some authors consider it to correspond phonemically with a close front vowel that is neither the vowel of nor that of ; it occurs chiefly in contexts where the contrast between these vowels is neutralized, implying that it represents an
archiphoneme, which may be written . Many speakers, however, do have a contrast in pairs of words like
studied and
studded or
taxis and
taxes; the contrast may be vs. , vs. or vs. , and thus some authors consider that the
happY-vowel should be identified phonemically either with the vowel of or that of , depending on the speaker. See also
happy-tensing. • , as in ''
, t
o each''. This is the back rounded counterpart to described above; its phonemic status is treated in the same works as cited there.
Vowel reduction in unstressed syllables is a significant feature of English. Syllables of the types listed above often correspond to a syllable containing a different vowel ("full vowel") used in other forms of the same
morpheme where that syllable is stressed. For example, the first
o in
photograph, being stressed, is pronounced with the vowel, but in
photography, where it is unstressed, it is reduced to schwa. Also, certain common words (
a,
an,
of,
for, etc.) are pronounced with a schwa when they are unstressed, although they have different vowels when they are in a stressed position (see
Weak and strong forms in English). Some unstressed syllables, however, retain full (unreduced) vowels, i.e. vowels other than those listed above. Examples are the in
ambition and the in
finite. Some phonologists regard such syllables as not being fully unstressed (they may describe them as having
tertiary stress); some dictionaries have marked such syllables as having
secondary stress. However linguists such as Ladefoged and regard this as a difference purely of vowel quality and not of stress, and thus argue that vowel reduction itself is phonemic in English. Examples of words where vowel reduction seems to be distinctive for some speakers include
chickaree vs.
chicory (the latter has the reduced vowel of , whereas the former has the vowel without reduction), and
Pharaoh vs.
farrow (both have the vowel, but in the latter word it may reduce to ). ==Lexical stress==