Pronunciation guide

(Note: the symbols used to represent sounds are consistent with the GnuSpeech articulatory synthesis system originally developed by Hill, Manzara & Schock, as the Trillium TextToSpeech system running under NeXTSTEP. They also follow IPA and Webster's forms closely, but are somewhat oversimplified in the end section (and in the Trillium dictionary) dealing with American sounds embodying rhotacised vowels (as in "bird" etc), for example.

Class Websters GnuSpeech
(Trillium)
IPA IPA description Example words (British pronunciation,
unless noted)
_______________________________
Short vowels Schwa (Lower mid central, unstressed)
_________
above, banana, collide, abut
Lower mid central (Pike) (See note 1)
_________
hud, humdrum, abut
Upper mid front unrounded
_________
head, bet, bed, peck
Semi-high front unrounded
_________
hid, tip, banish, active
Lower mid back rounded
_________
hod, nod, bottom, slot
Semi-high back rounded
_________
hood, pull, pull, look
_______________________________
Medium vowel Raised low front unrounded
_________
had, mat, apple, scrap
_______________________________
Long vowels High front unrounded
_________
heed, beet, machine, even
Mid central unrounded (not US rhotacised version)
_________
herd, birt, word, fertile
Low back unrounded (not US rhotacised version)
_________
hard, rather, arctic, blah
Lower mid back rounded (not US rhotacised version)
_________
all, gnaw, caught, worn
_______________________________
Diphthongs (See components)
_________
hate, today, grey, maiden
(See components)
_________
hoed, boat, beau, crowed, open
(See components)
_________
now, loud, bed, out
(See components)
_________
boy, coin, ointment, noise
(See components)
_________
nine, sight, buy, ply
_______________________________
Glides and liquids Voiced rounded labiovelar approximant
_________
won, away, waiver, always
Voiced palatal central approximant
_________
year, yoyo, onion, aryan
(Commonly used for several "r"sounds. Technically, for IPA, an inverted "r" should be used for the English frictionless continuant "r".
_________
zero, rise, arrow, ground
Voiced alveolar lateral approximant (See note 2)
_________
let, alone, lily, pull
_______________________________
Unvoiced stops Voiceless bilabial stop
_________
pat, slipper, map, piper
Voiceless alveolar or dental stop
_________
tap, wet, letter, potato
Voiceless velar stop
_________
kill, lacky, tack, racoon, cognac
_______________________________
Voiced stops Voiced bilabial stop
_________
ebbd, banana, rebel, pub
Voiced alveolar or dental stop
_________
udder, dad, elder, drop
Voiced velar stop
_________
get, bigger, hag, egregious
_______________________________
Nasals Voiced bilabial nasal
_________
me, moon, lemon, dam
Voiced alveolar or dental nasal
_________
now, canal, enemy, train
Voiced velar nasal
_________
ring, angst, anger, ungulate
_______________________________
Unvoiced fricatives Voiceless alveolar central fricative
_________
sit, sister, whisper, juice
Voiceless palato-alveolar central laminal fricative
_________
shot, mission, quiche, action, fish
Voiceless labio-dental central fricative
_________
fright, phone, effort, rough, ruff
Voiceless inter-dental central fricative
_________
thin, anther, truth, geothermal
_______________________________
Voiced fricatives Voiced alveolar central fricative
_________
zip, zoom, azalea, rose
Voiced palato-alveolar central laminal fricative
_________
measure, corsage, beige, asia
Voiced labio-dental fricative
_________
vat, verb, over, avenge, rave
Voiced apico-dental or inter-dental fricative
_________
that, mother, clothed, then
_______________________________
Unvoiced affricate Voiceless palato-alveolar affricate
_________
chat, fetch, ratchet, church
_______________________________
Voiced affricate Voiced palato-alveolar affricate
_________
jot, page, judge, adjacent
_______________________________
Aspirate Voiceless glottal central fricative (See note 3)
_________
hat, house, behind, eck

Note 1: Same as schwa in many US dialects (return)
Note 2: English has "clear l" and "dark l" (or "velarised l"). Synthesisers may account for the difference by a rewrite rule since in English these sounds do not distinguish words. The "dark l" occurs in post-vocalic positions (loosely, following vowels, diphthongs and triphthongs). "Clear l" occurs elsewhere. (return)
Note 3: In English, "h" is usually at least partially voiced in intervocalic position. Although there is a distinct IPA symbol for this ("h" with a right hook on the tail), the effect may be taken care of by a rewrite rule, as in the previous note. (return)

The following illustrate some pitfalls between American and British English

(The underscore is used to separate individual phonetic elements)

Note: an "r" sound is usually inserted between words in British English if the word junction is between two vowel-like sounds, even when no "r" is apparently present. Since an "r" is usually represented by a schwa sound at the end of words, the "r" will reappear as an "r" if the next word begins with a vowel-like sound (not for glides/liquids though).

American British
Websters GnuSpeech
(Trillium)
IPA Example words Websters GnuSpeech
(Trillium)
IPA
- - - when, whisper
- - - herd, bird, word
- - - cheer, hear - - -
- - - error, merry (The second syllable in "error" is schwa-r in American and schwa only in British) - - -
-- -- -- care, bear - - -
-- -- -- mary -- -- --
- - - poor
- - - Lourdes, tour - - -
- - - cord, lord
- - - porridge, foreign - - -

Note concerning the GnuSpeech standard dictionary and spoken output: The pronunciation of all words in the GnuSpeech test-to-speech system assumes a rhotic accent: that is, an "r" appearing in the orthographic form before a consonant, or a place where a pause will occur when spoken, is pronounced, as in General American, and unlike the Educated Southern English (RP) accent from Britain. Another systematic characteristic of General American compared to the RP accent is the use of short (IPA) rather than long in words like "command" and "dance". In fact the Educated Southern English accent seems to be changing in that direction anyway. Otherwise the GnuSpeech dictionary broadly follows the RP accent as specified by the new Oxford English dictionary and as informed by native speakers. It is considered that this gives an acceptable, if slightly strange mid-Atlantic accent. Later versions should allow selection between more precisely defined, better approximated accents.

Syllables, stress and American versus British English

(The underscore is used to separate individual phonetic elements)

Note: A period indicates nominal syllable boundaries. A single quotation mark (') denotes that the following syllable is given primary stress. A double quotation mark (") indicates secondary stress. Monosyllabic words are generally given stress only if they are "content" words (that is to say, they are a noun, verb, adjective or adverb). Form words (the rest) with only one syllable are not given stress (though some particular utterances may demand contrastive stress such as: "We were on the way to the stadium, not from it"). Americans do not all speak the same way, nor do the British speak the same way. Even within a group of people who nominally have the same accent, there will often be individual variation. The topic of accent and dialect cannot be covered here, except to draw to the reader's attention that the precise choice of the sounds and stresses are among the factors that comprise an individual's accent. Below are represented a few words in a typical British and a typical American accent. This hardly begins to address the topics of rhythm and intonation which are also important, and (for English) closely tied in to stress and vowel quality choices. It also ignores the more subtle differences in vowel quality between vowels which are represented by the same broad transcription symbol, but are articulated somewhat differently between (say) General American and RP. Narrow transcription and phonetic/phonological training are necessary for real precision. Exactly how to represent and reproduce correct vowel quality can still cause debate and confusion!

Word Accent Websters GnuSpeech
(Trillium)
IPA
Polygon British

American
Polygonal British

American
About British

American
Fire British

American
Command British

American

Page last updated 01-11-04.