Can you read IPA?

Follow

For the two people who answered "What's IPA?": IPA is the International Phonetic Alphabet, an alphabet designed to accurately represent the pronunciation of any spoken word in any language. It's used extensively by linguists, and is quite useful for the general public as well as it lets you learn exactly how something is pronounced without having to actually hear it.

More dictionaries should include IPA pronunciations for their entries, I think.

more rambling about the IPA 

Despite being an international alphabet, the IPA is based on the Latin alphabet with a few Greek letters thrown in, and the majority of the Latin alphabet is pronounced in the same way it is in Romance languages. Many of its other letters are rotated versions of other Latin letters, which was a choice made to minimize the amount of additional type that would need to be made for printing presses, as you can print a ɯ by turning an m upside-down, for instance.

There's a certain logic to the choice of symbols; the aforementioned sound /ɯ/ for example (IPA transcriptions--that is, written things meant to represent sound as opposed to writing, a distinction important to linguists) is similar to /u/, and as such the symbol ⟨ɯ⟩ (angle brackets, properly ⟨⟩ but commonly <>, are used to refer to the symbol itself, as opposed to the sound it represents) is similar to ⟨u⟩.

Newly invented letters are rare, and usually represent sounds that are utterly unfamiliar to European languages, like /!/ and /ʘ/, which are almost exclusively found in the Khoisan and Bantu language families of sub-Saharan Africa.

The IPA has no uppercase letters. A few sounds, such as /ʙ/, are represented with small capitals, but ordinary capital letters are reserved for other uses; for instance, C is commonly used to mean "any consonant", V for "any vowel", N for "any nasal consonant", and so on.

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Awoo Space

Awoo.space is a Mastodon instance where members can rely on a team of moderators to help resolve conflict, and limits federation with other instances using a specific access list to minimize abuse.

While mature content is allowed here, we strongly believe in being able to choose to engage with content on your own terms, so please make sure to put mature and potentially sensitive content behind the CW feature with enough description that people know what it's about.

Before signing up, please read our community guidelines. While it's a very broad swath of topics it covers, please do your best! We believe that as long as you're putting forth genuine effort to limit harm you might cause – even if you haven't read the document – you'll be okay!