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Pronunciation Guide
This discussion sets out the signification and use of the pronunciation symbols in
this dictionary, with special attention to those areas where experience has shown that dictionary users
may have questions. The order of symbols in this page is the same as the order in Pronunciation Symbols, with the exception that the
symbols which are not letter characters are listed first. For more information about pronunciations,
see Pronunciation Overview.
| Symbol |
Explanation |
| \ \ |
All pronunciation information is printed between reversed virgules. Pronunciation symbols are
printed in roman type and all other information, such as labels and notes, is printed in
italics.
|
| \ '" \ |
A single stress mark precedes a syllable with primary (strongest) stress; a double mark precedes
a syllable with secondary (medium) stress; a third level of weak stress requires no mark at all:
\'pen-m&n-"ship\. Since the nineteenth century the International Phonetics Association
has recommended that stress marks precede the stressed syllable, and linguists worldwide have
adopted this practice on the basic principle that before a syllable can be uttered the speaker
must know what degree of stress to give it. In accordance with the practice of French
phoneticians, no stress marks are shown in the transcription of words borrowed from French
whose pronunciations have not been anglicized, as at ancien régime and
émeute.
|
| \ - \ |
Hyphens are used to separate syllables in pronunciation transcriptions. In actual speech, of
course, there is no pause between the syllables of a word. The placement of hyphens is based on
phonetic principles, such as vowel length, nasalization, variation due to the position of a consonant in a syllable, and other nuances of the spoken word. The syllable breaks shown in
this text reflect the careful pronunciation of a single word out of context. Syllabication tends
to change in rapid or running speech: a consonant at the end of a syllable may shift into a
following syllable, and unstressed vowels may be elided. The numerous variations in pronunciation
that a word may have in running speech are of interest to phoneticians but are well outside the
scope of a dictionary of general English.
The centered dots in boldface entry words indicate potential end-of-line division points and
not syllabication. These division points are determined by considerations of both morphology
and pronunciation, among others. A detailed discussion of end-of-line division is contained
in the article on Division in Boldface Entry Words in Webster's Third New International
Dictionary. In this dictionary a consistent approach has been pursued, both toward word
division based on traditional formulas and toward syllabication based on phonetic principles.
As a result, the hyphens indicating syllable breaks and the centered dots indicating
end-of-line division often do not fall in the same places.
|
| \ ( ) \ |
Parentheses are used in pronunciations to indicate that whatever is symbolized between them is
present in some utterances but not in others; thus factory \'fak-t(&-)rE\ is pronounced
both \'fak-t&-rE\ and \'fak-trE\, industry \'in-(")d&s-trE\ is pronounced both
\'in-d&s-trE\ and \'in-"d&s-trE\. In some phonetic environments, as in
fence \'fen(t)s\ and boil \'boi(&)l\, it may be difficult to determine
whether the sound shown in parentheses is or is not present in a given utterance; even the usage
of a single speaker may vary considerably.
|
| \ , ; \ |
Variant pronunciations are separated by commas; groups of variants are separated by semicolons.
The order of variants does not mean that the first is in any way preferable to or more acceptable
than the others. All of the variants in this dictionary, except those restricted by a regional or
usage label, are widely used in acceptable educated speech. If evidence reveals that a particular
variant is used more frequently than another, the former will be given first. This should not,
however, prejudice anyone against the second or subsequent variants. In many cases the numerical
distribution of variants is equal but one of them, of course, must appear first.
|
| \ ÷ \ |
The obelus, or division sign, is placed before a pronunciation variant that occurs in educated
speech but that is considered by some to be questionable or unacceptable. This symbol is used
sparingly and primarily for variants that have been objected to over a period of time in print
by commentators on usage, in schools by teachers, or in correspondence that has come to the
Merriam-Webster editorial department. In most cases the objection is based on orthographic or
etymological arguments. For instance, the second variant of cupola \'kyü-p&-l&,
÷-"lO\, though used frequently in speech, is objected to because a is very rarely
pronounced \O\ in English. The pronunciations \'fe-by&-"wer-E\ and \'fe-b&-"wer-E\
(indicated simultaneously by the use of parentheses) are similarly marked at the entry for
February \÷'fe-b(y)&-"wer-E, 'fe-br&-\, even though they are the most
frequently heard pronunciations, because some people insist that both r's should be
pronounced. The obelus applies only to that portion of the transcription which it immediately
precedes and not to any other variants following.
|
| \ & \ |
in unstressed syllables as in banana, collide, abut. This neutral
vowel, called schwa, may be represented orthographically by any of the letters a,
e, i, o, u, y, and by many combinations of letters.
In running speech unstressed vowels are regularly pronounced as \&\ in American and British
speech. Unstressed \&\ often intrudes between a stressed vowel and a following \l\ or \r\ though
it is not represented in the spelling, as in eel \'E(&)l\ and sour
\'sau(-&)r\.
|
| \ '&, "& \ |
in stressed syllables as in humdrum, abut.
|
| \ & \ |
immediately preceding \l\, \n\, \m\, \[ng]\, as in battle, cotton,
and one pronunciation of open \'O-p&n\ and of and
\&[ng]\ as in one pronunciation of the phrase lock and key
\"läk-&[ng]-'kE\. The symbol \&\ preceding these consonants
does not itself represent a sound. It signifies instead that the following consonant is syllabic;
that is, the consonant itself forms the nucleus of a syllable that does not contain a vowel. In the
pronunciation of some French or French-derived words \&\ is placed immediately after
\l\, \m\, \r\ to indicate one nonsyllabic pronunciation of these consonants, as in the French words
table "table," prisme "prism," and
titre "title," each of which in isolation and in some contexts is a
one-syllable word.
|
| \ &r \ |
as in further, merger,
bird. (See the section on \r\.) The anglicized pronunciation of the
vowel \\ is represented in this book as \&(r)\. (See the section on \[oe]\.)
|
| \ '&r-, '&-r \ |
as in two different pronunciations of hurry. Most U.S. speakers pronounce \'h&r-E\ with
the \&r\ representing the same sounds as in bird \'b&rd\. Usually in metropolitan New
York and southern England and frequently in New England and the southeastern U.S. the vowel is much
the same as the vowel of hum followed by a syllable-initial variety of \r\. This pronunciation
of hurry is represented as \'h&-rE\ in this dictionary. Both types of pronunciation are
shown for words composed of a single meaningful unit (or morpheme) as in current, hurry,
and worry. In words such as furry, stirring, and purring in
which a vowel or vowel-initial suffix is added to a word ending in r or rr (as
fur, stir, and purr), the second type of pronunciation outlined above is
heard only occasionally and is not shown in this dictionary.
|
| \ a \ |
as in mat, map, mad, gag, snap, patch. Some variation
in this vowel is occasioned by the consonant that follows it; thus, for some speakers
map, mad, and gag have noticeably different vowel sounds. There is a
very small number of words otherwise identical in pronunciation that these speakers may distinguish
solely by variation of this vowel, as in the two words can (put into cans; be able) in
the sentence "Let's can what we can." However, this distinction is sufficiently infrequent
that the traditional practice of using a single symbol is followed in this book.
|
| \ A \ |
as in day, fade, date, aorta, drape, cape. In most
English speech this is actually a diphthong. In lowland South Carolina, in coastal Georgia and
Florida, and occasionally elsewhere \A\ is pronounced as a monophthong. As a diphthong \A\
has a first element \e\ or monophthongal \A\ and a second element \i\.
|
| \ ä \ |
as in bother, cot, and, with most American speakers, father, cart. The
symbol \ä\ represents the vowel of cot, cod, and the stressed vowel of
collar in the speech of those who pronounce this vowel differently from the vowel in
caught, cawed, and caller, represented by \o\. In U.S. speech \ä\
is pronounced with little or no rounding of the lips, and it is fairly long in duration,
especially before voiced consonants. In southern England \ä\ is usually accompanied by some
lip rounding and is relatively short in duration. The vowel \o\ generally has appreciable lip
rounding. Some U.S. speakers (a perhaps growing minority) do not distinguish between cot--caught, cod--cawed, and collar--caller,
usually because they lack or have less lip rounding in the words transcribed with \o\. Though the
symbols \ä\ and \o\ are used throughout this dictionary to distinguish the members of the
above pairs and similar words, the speakers who rhyme these pairs will automatically reproduce a
sound that is consistent with their own speech. In words such as card and cart most
U.S. speakers have a sequence of sounds that we transcribe as \är\. Most speakers who do not
pronounce \r\ before another consonant or a pause, however, do not rhyme card with either
cod or cawed and do not rhyme cart with either cot or caught.
The pronunciation of card and cart by such speakers, although not shown in this
dictionary, would be transcribed as \'k[a']d\ and \'k[a']t\. Speakers of r-dropping dialects will
automatically substitute \[a']\ for the transcribed \är\. (See the sections on \[a']\ and \r\.)
|
| \ [a'] \ |
as in father as pronounced by those who do not rhyme it with bother. The pronunciation
of this vowel varies regionally. In eastern New England and southern England it is generally
pronounced farther forward in the mouth than \ä\ but not as far forward as \a\. In New York
City and the southeastern U.S. it may have much the same quality as \ä\ but somewhat greater
duration. In areas in which \r\ is not pronounced before another consonant or a pause, \[a']\ occurs
for the sequence transcribed in this book as \är\. (See the sections on \ä\
and \r\.) In these areas \[a']\ also occurs with varying frequency in a small group
of words in which a in the spelling is followed by a consonant letter other than r and
is not preceded by w or wh, as in father, calm, palm, and
tomato but not in watch, what, or swap (though \[a']\ does sometimes
occur in waft). Especially in southern England and, less consistently, in eastern New England
\[a']\ occurs in certain words in which \a\ is the usual American vowel and in most of which the vowel
is followed by \f\, \th\, \s\, or by \n\ and another consonant, as in the words after,
bath, mask, and slant. The symbol \[a']\ is also used in the transcription of
some foreign-derived words and names. This vowel, as in French patte "paw" and
chat "cat," is intermediate between \a\ and \ä\ and is similar in quality to
the \[a']\ heard in eastern New England.
|
| \ au \ |
as in now, loud, out. The initial element of this diphthong may vary from \a\ to
\[a']\ or \ä\, the first being more common in Southern and south Midland speech than elsewhere.
In coastal areas of the southern U.S. and in parts of Canada this diphthong is often realized as
\&u\ when immediately preceding a voiceless consonant, as in the noun house and in
out.
|
| \ b \ |
as in baby, rib. |
| \ ch \ |
as in chin, nature \'nA-ch&r\. Actually, this sound is \t\ + \sh\. The distinction between
the phrases why choose and white shoes is maintained by a difference in the
syllabication of the \t\ and the \sh\ in each case and the consequent use of different varieties
(or allophones) of \t\.
|
| \ d \ |
as in did, adder. (See the section on \t\ below for a
discussion of the flap allophone of \d\.)
|
| \ e \ |
as in bet, bed, peck. In Southern and Midland dialects this vowel before
nasal consonants often has a raised articulation that approximates \i\, so that pen has nearly
the pronunciation \'pin\.
|
| \ 'E, "E\ |
in stressed syllables as in beat, nosebleed, evenly, easy.
|
| \ E \ |
in unstressed syllables, as in easy, mealy. Though the fact is not shown in this book,
some dialects such as southern British and southern U.S. often, if not usually, pronounce \i\ instead
of unstressed \E\.
|
| \ f \ |
as in fifty, cuff. |
| \ g \ |
as in go, big, gift. |
| \ h \ |
as in hat, ahead. |
| \ hw \ |
as in whale as pronounced by those who do not have the same pronunciation for both
whale and wail. Most U.S. speakers distinguish these two words as \'hwA(&)l\ and
\'wA(&)l\ respectively, though frequently in the U.S. and usually in southern England \'wA(&)l\
is used for both. Some linguists consider \hw\ to be a single sound, a voiceless \w\.
|
| \ i \ |
as in tip, banish, active. |
| \ I \ |
as in site, side, buy, tripe. Actually, this sound is a diphthong,
usually composed of \ä\ + \i\ or \[a']\ + \i\. In Southern speech, especially before a pause
or voiced consonant, as in shy and five, the second element \i\ may not be pronounced.
Chiefly in eastern Virginia, coastal South Carolina, and parts of Canada the diphthong is approximately
\'&\ + \i\ before voiceless consonants, as in nice and write.
|
| \ j \ |
as in job, gem, edge, join, judge. Actually, this sound
is \d\ + \zh\. Assuming the anglicization of Jeanne d'Arc as \zhän-'därk\, the
distinction between the sentences They betray John Dark and They betrayed Jeanne d'Arc
is maintained by a difference in the syllabication of the \d\ and the \zh\ in each case and the
consequent use of different varieties (or allophones) of \d\.
|
| \ k \ |
as in kin, cook, ache. |
| \ [k] \ |
as in German ich "I," Buch "book," and one pronunciation of
English loch. Actually, there are two distinct sounds in German; the \k\ in ich
is pronounced toward the front of the mouth and the \[k]\ in Buch is pronounced toward
the back. In English, however, no two words otherwise identical are distinguished by these two
varieties of \[k]\, and therefore only a single symbol is necessary.
|
| \ l \ |
as in lily, pool. In words such as battle and fiddle the
\l\ is a syllabic consonant. (See the section on \&\ above.)
|
| \ m \ |
as in murmur, dim, nymph. In pronunciation variants of some words, such
as open and happen, \m\ is a syllabic consonant. (See the section on \&\ above.)
|
| \ n \ |
as in no, own. In words such as cotton and sudden, the \n\ is a
syllabic consonant. (See the section on \&\ above.)
|
| \ [n] \ |
indicates that a preceding vowel or diphthong is pronounced with the nasal passages open, as in
French un bon vin blanc\[oe][n]-bo[n]-va[n]-blä[n]\
"a good white wine."
|
| \ [ng] \ |
as in sing \'si[ng]\, singer \'si[ng]-&r\, finger \'fi[ng]-g&r\,
ink \'i[ng]k\. In some rare contexts \[ng]\ may be a syllabic consonant. (See the section on
\&\ above.)
|
| \ O \ |
as in bone, know, beau. Especially in positions of emphasis, such as when
it is word final or when as primary stress, \O\ tends to become diphthongal, moving from \O\
toward a second element \u\. In southern England and in some U.S. speech, particularly in the
Philadelphia area and in the Pennsylvania-Ohio-West Virginia border area, the first element is often
approximately \&\. In coastal South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida stressed \O\ is often
monophthongal when final, but when a consonant follows it is often a diphthong moving from \O\ to
\&\. In this book the symbol \O\ represents all of the above variants. As an unstressed vowel
before another vowel, \O\ is often pronounced as a schwa with slight lip rounding that is separated
from the following vowel by the glide \w\, as in following \'fä-l&-wi[ng]\. This
reduced variant is not usually shown at individual entries.
|
| \ o \ |
as in saw, all, gnaw, caught. (See the section on \ä\.)
|
| \ [oe] \ |
as in French boeuf "beef," German Hölle "hell." This vowel,
which occurs only in foreign-derived terms and names, can be approximated by attempting to pronounce
the vowel \e\ with the lips moderately rounded as for the vowel \u\. This vowel is often anglicized
as the \&r\ of bird by those who do not "drop their r's" or as the corresponding
vowel of bird used by those who do (see the section on \r\). Where this
anglicization is shown, it is represented as \&(r)\.
|
| \ [OE] \ |
as in French feu "fire," German Höhle
"hole." This vowel, which occurs primarily in foreign-derived terms and names, can be
approximated by attempting to pronounce a monophthongal vowel \A\ with the lips fully rounded as for
the vowel \ü\. This vowel also occurs in Scots and thus is used in the pronunciation of
guidwillie, mainly restricted to Scotland.
|
| \ oi \ |
as in coin, destroy. In some Southern speech, especially before a consonant in the
same word, the second element may disappear or be replaced by \&\. Some utterances of
drawing and sawing have a sequence of vowel sounds identical to that in coin,
but because drawing and sawing are analyzed by many as two-syllable words they are
transcribed with a parenthesized hyphen: \'dro(-)i[ng]\, \'so(-)i[ng]\.
|
| \ p \ |
as in pepper, lip. |
| \ r \ |
as in red, rarity, car, beard. What is transcribed here as \r\ in
reality represents several distinct sounds. Before a stressed vowel \r\ denotes a continuant produced
with the tongue tip slightly behind the teethridge. This sound is usually voiceless when it follows a
voiceless stop, as in pray, tree, and cram. After a vowel in the same syllable
\r\ is most often a semivowel characterized by retroflexion of the tongue tip. The sequences \ar\,
\är\, \er\, \ir\, \or\, \ur\, and \&r\ may then be considered diphthongs. In some speech
the retroflexion of the \r\ occurs throughout the articulation of the vowel, but in other cases
the first vowel glides into a retroflex articulation. In the latter cases a brief transition vowel
is sometimes heard; this variable and nondistinctive glide is not transcribed in this book, but is
considered implicit in the symbol \r\. In Received Pronunciation \r\ is sometimes pronounced as a flap
in the same contexts in which \t\ and \d\ occur as flaps in American English. (See the section on
\t\ below.) Occasionally the flap may be heard after consonants, as in bright
and grow. In other dialects of British English, particularly Scottish, \r\ may be pronounced as
an alveolar trill or as a uvular trill. In some dialects, especially those of the southeastern U.S.,
eastern New England, New York City, and southern England, \r\ is not pronounced after a vowel in
the same syllable. This is often, if somewhat misleadingly, referred to as r-dropping. In these
dialects r is pronounced as a nonsyllabic \&\ when it occurs in these positions or there
may be no sound corresponding to the r, thus beard, corn, and assured
may be pronounced as \'bi&d\, \'ko&n\, and \&-'shu&d\ or, usually with some lengthening
of the vowel sound, as \'bid\, \'kon\, and \&-'shud\. In car, card, and
cart those who do not pronounce \r\ generally have a vowel which we would transcribe
as \A\, usually pronounced with some lengthening and without a following \&\. (See the
sections on \ä\ and \A\.) The stressed vowel of bird
and hurt in r-dropping speech is similar to the vowel used by r-keepers in the same words but without
the simultaneous raising of the center and/or tip of the tongue. In the U.S. most speakers of
r-dropping dialects will pronounce \r\ before consonants in some words or in some contexts. Because it
is determined by the phonetic context, r-dropping is not explicitly represented in this dictionary;
speakers of r-dropping dialects will automatically substitute the sounds appropriate to their own
speech.
|
| \ s \ |
as in source, less. |
| \ sh \ |
as in shy, mission, machine, special. Actually, this is a single sound,
not two. When the two sounds \s\ and \h\ occur in sequence, they are separated by a hyphen in this
book, as in grasshopper \'gras-"hä-p&r\.
|
| \ t \ |
as in tie, attack, late, later, latter. In some contexts, as when
a stressed or unstressed vowel precedes and an unstressed vowel or \&l\ follows, the sound
represented by t or tt is pronounced in most American speech as a voiced flap produced
by the tongue tip tapping the teethridge. In similar contexts the sound represented by d or
dd has the same pronunciation. Thus, the pairs ladder and latter,
leader and liter, parody and parity are often homophones. At the end of
a syllable \t\ often has an incomplete articulation with no release, or it is accompanied or replaced
by a glottal closure. When \t\ occurs before the syllabic consonant \&n\ as in button
\'b&-t&n\, the glottal allophone is often heard. This may reflect a syllabication of \t\ with
the preceding stressed syllable (i.e., \'b&t-&n\).
|
| \ th \ |
as in thin, ether. Actually, this is a single sound, not two. When the two sounds \t\
and \h\ occur in sequence they are separated by a hyphen in this book, as in knighthood
\'nIt-"hud\.
|
| \ [th] \ |
as in then, either, this. Actually, this is a single sound, not two. The
difference between \th\ and \[th]\ is that the former is pronounced without and the
latter with vibration of the vocal cords.
|
| \ ü \ |
as in rule, youth, union \'yün-y&n\, few \'fyü\. As an
unstressed vowel before another vowel, \ü\ is often pronounced as a schwa with slight
lip rounding that is separated from the following vowel by the glide \w\, as valuing
\'val-y&-wi[ng]\. This reduced variant is not usually shown at individual entries. Younger
speakers of American English often use a more centralized and less rounded pronunciation of \ü\
in certain words (as news and musician), both in stressed and especially in unstressed
syllables.
|
| \ u \ |
as in pull, wood, book, curable \'kyur-&-b&l\, fury \'fyur-E\. |
| \ [ue] \ |
as in German füllen "to fill," hübsch "handsome." This
vowel, which occurs only in foreign-derived terms and names, can be approximated by attempting to
pronounce the vowel \i\ with the lips moderately rounded as for the vowel \u\.
|
| \ [UE] \ |
as in French rue "street," German fühlen "to feel." This
vowel, which occurs only in foreign-derived terms and names, can be approximated by attempting to
pronounce the vowel \E\ with the lips fully rounded as for the vowel \ü\.
|
| \ v \ |
as in vivid, invite. |
| \ w \ |
as in we, away. |
| \ y \ |
as in yard, young, cue \'kyü\, curable \'kyur-&-b&l\, few \'fyü\,
fury \'fyur-E\, union \'yün-y&n\. The sequences \lyü\, \syü\, and \zyü\ in
the same syllable, as in lewd, suit, and presume, are common in southern
British speech but are rare in American speech and only \lü\, \sü\, and \zü\
are shown in this dictionary. A sequence of \h\ and \y\ as in hue and huge is
pronounced by some speakers as a \[k]\ articulated toward the front of the mouth.
In English \y\ does not occur at the end of a syllable after a vowel. In a few words of French
origin whose pronunciation has not been anglicized, a postvocalic \y\ is transcribed, as in
mille-feuille \mEl-f[oe]y\ and in rouille \'rü-E, French rüy\.
The sound represented is the consonantal \y\ of yard.
|
| \ [y] \ |
indicates that during the articulation of the preceding consonant the tongue has substantially
the position it has for the articulation of the \y\ of yard, as in French digne
\dEn[y]\ "worthy." Thus [y] does not itself represent a sound but
rather modifies the preceding symbol.
|
| \ z \ |
as in zone, raise. |
| \ zh \ |
as in vision, azure \'a-zh&r\. Actually, this is a single sound, not two. When the
two sounds \z\ and \h\ occur in sequence, they are separated by a hyphen in this book, as in
hogshead \'hogz-"hed, 'hägz-\.
|
|