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Appendix:German pronunciation

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents German pronunciations in Wiktionary entries.

See German phonology at Wikipedia for a more thorough look at the sounds of German.

German consonant pronunciation
IPA Examples English approximation
/b/ Ball ball
/ç/ ich, durch hue
/d/ dann done
/d͡ʒ/ Dschungel jungle
/f/ Fass, Vogel fuss
/ɡ/ Gast guest
/h/ hat hut
/j/ ja yard
/k/ kalt, Tag cold
/l/ Last last
/m/ Mast must
/n/ Naht not
/ŋ/ lang long
/p/ Pakt, hab puck
/p͡f/ Pfahl cupfull
/ʁ/ Rast like a French R
(a voiced uvular fricative)[1]
/s/ Wasser fast
/ʃ/ Schal, Stein shall
/t/ Tal tall
/t͡s/ Zahl cats
/t͡ʃ/ Matsch match
/v/ was vanish
/x/: [x], [χ] Bach[2] loch (Scottish)
/z/ Hase[3] hose
/ʒ/ Genie beige, measure
[ʔ] Beamter[4]
([bəˈʔamtɐ])
the glottal stop in uh-oh!
Stress
ˈ Bahnhof
([ˈbaːnˌhoːf])
as in battleship [ˈbætəlˌʃɪp]
ˌ
German vowel pronunciation
IPA Examples English approximation
Monophthongs
/a/ Dach bra (but shorter)
// Bahn bra
// Beet face
/ɛ/ Bett, hätte bed
/ɛː/ wähle[5] as above but longer; like RP English barely
// viel meet
/ɪ/ bist sit
// schon, Boot somewhat like bone
/ɔ/ Post boss
/øː/ Öl somewhat like hurl; French deux
/œ/ göttlich close to hurt or French sœur
// Hut true
/ʊ/ Putz took
// Rübe French rue
/ʏ/ füllt much like the above but shorter
Diphthongs
/aɪ̯/ weit tie
/aʊ̯/ Haut how
/ɔɪ̯/ Heu, Räuber[6] boy
Reduced vowels
/ɐ/[7] Ober[8] fun
/ə/[9] halte comma
Semivowels
/ɐ̯/ Uhr uh
/i̯/ Studie magnolia
/u̯/ aktuell visual
/y̯/ Libyen French huit
Unstressed full vowels
/e/ Methan (short [eː])
/i/ vital city (short [iː])
/o/ Moral (short [oː])
/ø/ Ökonom (short [øː])
/u/ kulant virtue (short [uː])
/y/ Psychologie (short [yː])

Notes

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  1. ^ In free variation with [ʀ] and also — in Switzerland, Bavaria, and Austria — the voiced alveolar trill [r]. Compare /ɐ/.
  2. ^ /x/ is realized as a uvular fricative [χ] after [a], [aː], and often [ʊ], [ɔ], and [aʊ].
  3. ^ Predominantly realized as [z̥] (devoiced) or [s] (voiceless) in southern regions (Switzerland, Bavaria, Austria).
  4. ^ The presence or absence of [ʔ] is not phonemic. In most standard varieties of German, all initial vowels are preceded by [ʔ]. However, this does not generally hold true for Austrian, southern, and Swiss standard German and most colloquial varieties.
  5. ^ [ɛː] is often replaced by [eː], chiefly in northern and eastern Germany, and eastern Austria.
  6. ^ Some references transcribe this diphthong as /ɔʏ/.
  7. ^ /ɐ/ is often merged into, and hence not distinguished from, [ə], specifically in southern Germany and Austria. The /ɐ//a/ merger is true in northern Germany.
  8. ^ Compare /ʁ/.
  9. ^ In Austria and Germany, /ə/, before sonorants /l/, /m/, and /n/ in the syllable coda, often disappears so that they become syllabic [l̩], [m̩], and [n̩]. Especially in Austrian, southern, and Swiss standard German, /ə/, representing unstressed e, is alternatively realized as [ɛ] or even within Switzerland, [e].

Bibliography

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  • Duden 6: Das Aussprachewörterbuch (3rd edition, 1990, →ISBN).