မာတိကာသို့ ခုန်သွားရန်

အကူအညီ:IPA for German

ဝီကီပီးဒီးယား မှ

The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents German language pronunciations in Wikipedia articles.

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

Consonants
IPAExamplesEnglish approximation
b Ball[]ball
ç ich, durchhue
d dann[]done
f Fass, Vogelfuss
ɡ Gast[]guest
h hathut
j jayard
k kaltcold
l Lastlast
m Mastmust
n Nahtnot
ŋ langlong
p Paktpuck
pf Pfahlcupfull
ʁ Rast[]French: rouge
ʀ red (Northumbrian Burr, trilled [ʁ])
r far (Scottish English)
s Hast, großfast
ʃ schal, Steinshall
t Taltall
ts Zahlcats
Matschmatch
v wasvanish
x Bach[]loch (Scottish English)
z Hase[]hose
ʔ beamtet[]
([bəˈʔamtət])
the glottal stop in uh-oh!
Non-native consonants
Dschungel[]jungle
ʒ Genie[]pleasure
Stress
ˈ Bahnhofstraße
([ˈbaːnhoːfˌʃtʁaːsə])
as in battleship /ˈbætəlˌʃɪp/
ˌ
Vowels
IPAExamplesEnglish approximation
Monophthongs
a Dachbra (but shorter)
Bahnbra
Beetface
ɛ Bett, hättebed
ɛː wähle[]says
vielfeel
ɪ bistsit
Bootroughly like law (British English), or road (American English)
ɔ Postcost
øː Ölroughly like hurt
œ göttlichroughly like hurt
Hutpool
ʊ Putztook
Rüberoughly like few
ʏ fülltmuch like the above but shorter
Diphthongs
weittie
Hauthow
ɔʏ Heu, Räuberroughly like boy
Reduced vowels
ɐ Ober[]fun
ə haltecomma (when pronounced without stress)
Semivowels
ɐ̯ Uhr[]comma
Studiestudio
aktuellactual
Non-native vowels[]
e Methan(short [eː])
i vitalcity (short [iː])
o Moral(short [oː])
ø Ökonom(short [øː])
u kulant(short [uː])
y Psychologie(short [yː])
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 The German lenis consonants [b d ɡ z ʒ dʒ] are often pronounced without voice as [b̥ d̥ ɡ̊ z̥ ʒ̊ d̥ʒ̊]. In Southern German, the voiceless pronunciation prevails.
  2. 1 2 3 Pronunciation of /r/ in German varies according to region and speaker. While older prescriptive pronunciation dictionaries allowed only [r], this pronunciation is nowadays found mainly in Switzerland, Bavaria and Austria, while in other regions the uvular pronunciation prevails, with the allophones [ʁ] and [ʀ]. In many regions except for Switzerland, the /r/ in the syllable coda is vocalized to [ɐ̯] after long vowels or after all vowels, and /ər/ is pronounced as [ɐ]
  3. /x/ is realized as a uvular fricative [χ] after /a/, /aː/, and often /ʊ/, /ɔ/, and /aʊ/.
  4. In many varieties of German except for Swiss Standard German, all initial vowels are preceded by [ʔ] .
  5. [ɛː] is often replaced by [eː].
  6. [e i o ø u y], the short versions of the long vowels [eː iː oː øː uː yː], are used in unstressed syllables before the accented syllable and occur only in loanwords. In native words, the accent is generally on the first syllable, and there are no syllables before the accent besides prepositional prefixes.

တမ်းပလိတ်:IPA keys horizontal