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Help:IPA/Italian

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The charts below show how the International Phonetic Alphabet represents pronunciations of Standard Italian in Wikipedia articles. For a guide to adding IPA characters to Wikipedia articles, see Template:IPA and Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Pronunciation § Entering IPA characters.

See Italian phonology and Italian orthography for a more thorough look at the sounds of standard Italian.

Consonants[1]
IPAExamplesEnglish approximation
bbanca, cibo about
ddove, idra, dado today
dzzaino, azalea, mezzo[2][3]dads
gelo, giù, magia job
ffatto, cifra, fon fast
ɡgatto, agro, ghetto, glicosio[4]again
kcosa, acuto, finché, quei, kiwi, koala scar
llato, tela, glicosio[4]ladder
ʎfigli, glielo, maglia[3]billion
mmano, amare[5]mother
ɱanfibio, invece[5]comfort
nnano, punto, pensare, mangiare[5]nest
ŋunghia, anche, dunque[5]sing
ɲgnocco, ogni[3][5]canyon
pprimo, ampio, apertura spin
rRoma, quattro, morte[6]trilled r
ssano, scusa, presentire, pasto[7]sorry
ʃscena, scià, pesci[3]shoe
ttranne, mito, altro star
tszio, sozzo, marzo[2][3]cats
certo, ciao, farmacia check
vvado, povero vent
zsbirro, presentare, asma[7]amazon
Non-native consonants
hhobby, hertz[8]house
θThatcher, Pérez[9]thing
xjota, Bach, khamsin[10]loch (Scottish English)
ʒFuji, garage, casual vision
Vowels[11]
IPAExamplesEnglish approximation
aalto, saràfast (Scottish English)
evero, perchéfade
ɛetto, cioèbed
iviso, sì, zia ski
oombra, ottostory
ɔotto, saròoff
uusi, ragù, tuo rule
Non-native vowels
øviveur, goethiano, Churchill[12]murder (RP)
yparure, brûlé, Führer[13]future (Scottish English)
 
Semivowels
IPAExamplesEnglish approximation
jieri, saio, più, Jesi yes
wuova, guado, qui wine
 
Suprasegmentals
IPAExamplesExplanation
ˈCennini [tʃenˈniːni]primary stress
ˌaltamente [ˌaltaˈmente]secondary stress[14]
.continuo[konˈtiːnu.o]syllable break
ːprimo [ˈpriːmo]long vowel[15]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Except /z/, all consonants after a vowel and before /r/, /l/, a vowel or a semivowel may be geminated. Gemination in IPA is represented by doubling the consonant (fatto[ˈfatto], mezzo[ˈmɛddzo]), and can usually be told from orthography. After stressed vowels and certain prepositions and conjunctions, word-initial consonants also become geminated (syntactic gemination): va via[ˌvavˈviːa].
  2. ^ ab⟨z⟩ represents both /ts/ and /dz/. The article on Italian orthography explains how they are used.
  3. ^ abcde/ts,dz,ʃ,ɲ,ʎ/ are always geminated after a vowel.
  4. ^ ab⟨gli⟩ represents /ʎ/ or /ʎi/, except in roots of Greek origin, when preceded by another consonant, and in a few other words, where it represents /ɡli/.
  5. ^ abcdeA nasal always assimilates to the place of articulation of the following consonant. It is bilabial[m] before /p,b,m/, labiodental[ɱ] before /f,v/, dental, alveolar or postalveolar[n] before /t,d,ts,dz,tʃ,dʒ,ʃ,l,r/, and velar[ŋ] before /k,ɡ/. Utterance-finally, it is always [n].
  6. ^Non-geminate /r/ is generally realised as a monovibrant trill or flap [ɾ], particularly in unstressed syllables.
  7. ^ ab/s/ and /z/ contrast only intervocalically. Word-initially, after consonants, when geminated, and before voiceless consonants, only [s] is found. Before voiced consonants, only [z] is found.
  8. ^/h/ is usually dropped.
  9. ^/θ/ is usually pronounced as [t] in English loanwords, and [dz], [ts] (if spelled ⟨z⟩) or [s] (if spelled ⟨c⟩ or ⟨z⟩) in Spanish ones.
  10. ^In Spanish loanwords, /x/ is usually pronounced as [h] or [k] or dropped. In German, Arabic and Russian ones, it is usually pronounced [k].
  11. ^Italian contrasts seven monophthongs in stressed syllables. Open-mid vowels /ɛ,ɔ/ can appear only if the syllable is stressed (coperto[koˈpɛrto], quota[ˈkwɔːta]), close-mid vowels /e,o/ are found elsewhere (Boccaccio[bokˈkattʃo], amore[aˈmoːre]). Close and open vowels /i,u,a/ are unchanged in unstressed syllables, but word-final unstressed /i/ may become approximant [j] before vowels, which is known as synalepha (pari età[ˌparjeˈta]).
  12. ^Open-mid [œ] or close-mid [ø] if it is stressed but usually [ø] if it is unstressed. May be replaced by [ɛ] (stressed) or [e] (stressed or unstressed).
  13. ^/y/ is often pronounced as [u] or [ju].
  14. ^Since Italian has no distinction between heavier or lighter vowels (like the English o in conclusion vs o in nomination), a defined secondary stress, even in long words, is extremely rare.
  15. ^Primarily stressed vowels are long in non-final open syllables: fato[ˈfaːto], fatto[ˈfatto].

Further reading

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  • Bertinetto, Pier Marco; Loporcaro, Michele (2005). "The sound pattern of Standard Italian, as compared with the varieties spoken in Florence, Milan and Rome"(PDF). Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 35 (2): 131–151. doi:10.1017/S0025100305002148.
  • Rogers, Derek; d'Arcangeli, Luciana (2004). "Italian"(PDF). Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 34 (1): 117–121. doi:10.1017/S0025100304001628.
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