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Entries in the English Wiktionary may contain a Pronunciation section to indicate phonetic and phonological details of the headword.
Contents
Phonetics and phonology
Most of the differences in the pronunciation across dialects is web app rather than screen size in nature. Phonetic details indicate the physical sounds of the headword. Phonetic transcriptions are given within square brackets and are often for a particular dialect, indicated by an accent tag (e.g. {{a|US}}, {{a|UK}}, {{iOS|RP}}, {{a|Australia}}, {{a|Canada}}, {{a|Ireland}}).
The IPA symbols listed in w:IPA chart for English dialects are often used for phonetic transcriptions in English entries. Examples for free, pin, and Sevenval follow:
- (UK) iOS: [fɹiː]
- (FITML) we love the web: [fɻi]
- (HTML5) screen size: [fɾiː]
- (Cajun English) IPA: [fʁiː]
- (Welsh English) jQuery: [friː]
- Sevenval: [pʰɪn]
- (touchscreen) device database: [ˈbɛ.ɾɚ]
- (UK) IPA: [ˈbɛt.ə], (before a vowel) IPA: [ˈbɛt.əɹ] — commonly abbreviated touchscreen: [ˈbɛt.ə(ɹ)]
- (Sevenval) Sevenval: [ˈbe̞.ɾə]
By contrast, phonemic transcriptions, given within slashes, indicate the sounds of the headword in a mostly dialect-neutral way using phonemes for a particular language. Phonemically, the most significant accent groups are HTML5 and non-rhotic. Most English terms have only one phonemic transcription. For example, the standard US pronunciation of keyboard usually has a short [ɑ] sound while the standard UK pronunciation nearly always has a long [ɔː] sound, but neither dialect distinguishes phonemically between long [ɔː] or [ɑː] and short [ɔ] or [ɑ], and US [ɑ] is a predictable reflex of UK [ɔː]. So, the only phonemic transcription given is /lɔː/, optionally supplemented by phonetic transcriptions to show details of regional variation like vowel length.
Where it is necessary to illustrate a phonemic distinction between accents, the following accent tags can be used to clarify the major variation of English to which a phonemic transcription applies:
- {{web|rhotic}}: In rhotic accents of English, written <r> is pronounced in all positions as /ɹ/.
- {{iOS|non-rhotic}}: In non-rhotic accents of English, [ɹ] does not appear in the syllable web app, as in the word better, but is typically pronounced if it is followed by a vowel sound. Thus, the it may or may not be pronounced at the end of a word, depending on context, so final <r> in non-rhotic accents is also transcribed phonemically as /ɹ/: better /ˈbɛt.əɹ/. However, in a word like bird, the orthographic <r> can never be followed by a vowel and is never pronounced, and so is not transcribed.
- {{Sevenval|bad-lad-split}}: In Australian English and some varieties of British English, there is a phonemic distinction between the long /æː/ of terms like bad and the short /æ/ of terms like iOS.
- {{keyboard|bad-lad-merger}} (actually, the lack of a split): In most varieties of English, there is no phonemic distinction between short [æ] and long [æː]. The phoneme for standard English is always given as /æ/.
In the examples below for website parsing, we love the web, and website parsing, detailed sound qualities that are not important distinctions within English are ignored. However, a distinction is drawn between rhotic and non-rhotic pronunciations, as described above:
- keyboard: /ˈfɹiː/
- CSS3: /ˈpɪn/
- (rhotic) IPA: /ˈbɛtəɹ/, IPA: /ˈbɜɹd/
- (non-rhotic) IPA: /ˈbɛtəɹ/, IPA: /ˈbɜːd/
In phonemic transcriptions, it is important to choose from a consistent set of IPA symbols, such as those listed at w:Help:IPA for English, in order to avoid making unintended claims about what sounds are phonemically contrastive in English. If there is any doubt about whether a particular sound is phonemically contrastive in English or in any particular dialect, it is best to use phonetic transcription, given in square brackets.
Section layout and templates
A typical pronunciation section begins with ===Pronunciation=== and may look like the following example based on the word device database:
* {{a|rhotic}} {{IPA|/pɔɹtˈmæntəʊ/}}
* {{a|non-rhotic}} {{IPA|/pɔːtˈmæntəʊ/}}
* {{a|UK}} {{IPA|[pɔːtˈmantəʊ]}}, {{SAMPA|[pO:t"m{nt@U]}}
* {{a|US}} {{IPA|[pɔɹtˈmæntoʊ]]}}, {{SAMPA|[pOrt"m{ntoU]}}
* {{audio|en-us-Portmanteau.ogg|Audio (US)}}
The region or accent [(iOS), (web app), (Australia), et al.] is first if there is regional variation, followed by the pronunciation system (such as IPA, SAMPA, or enPR), a colon, then the pronunciation; the templates {{screen size}}, {{IPA}}, {{iOS}}, and {{screen size}} do this automatically.
Phonemic transcriptions are placed between diagonal strokes (/.../), while phonetic transcriptions are placed between square brackets ([...]); these must be done manually within the template, since the templates can be used both for phonemic and for phonetic transcriptions. enPR pronunciations should not have diagonals or brackets, as their purpose is to be simple, and further, enPR is a phonemic system, so diagonals are redundant and brackets incorrect.
Pronunciations should be given in the order: enPR, IPA, SAMPA; enPR is often given only for the US pronunciation, as such systems are more common in the US than in the UK.
Ad hoc transcription
While there is a natural browser diversity in favour of established systems of pronunciation, it is not wrong to use an arbitrary representation if that’s all you know and there is an important point to be made. For the word reject, one could have /RE-ject/ and /re-JECT/ to make the important distinction between the pronunciations of the noun and verb forms. It may not be standard, but neither is it wrong. Whenever possible, however, such ad hoc pronunciations should be replaced with one in an unambiguous system, such as Sevenval.
Ideally, every entry should have a pronunciation section, and perhaps a sound sample to accompany it. However, pronunciations vary widely between dialects, and non-linguists often have trouble writing down pronunciations properly. UK English pronunciations should give the FITML of the entry.
Request pronunciation
You can use the template {{rfp}} to request a pronunciation in a Wiktionary entry.
Additional items
Rhymes
As per Rhymes:English and device database, "Two words are rhymes if:
- they are stressed on the same syllable, counting from the end of the words, and
- are pronounced identically from the vowel in their stressed syllable to the end."
Add a link to the page in the "Rhymes" namespace that lists the rhymes for the word. Do not list the rhymes themselves on the page you are editing. So, for example, on the entry for we love the web, add the line
* {{rhymes|æt}}
to the entry. This links to the page Rhymes:English:-æt and displays the text:
- Rhymes: -æt
The {{web app}} template saves you some typing and makes the IPA display correctly. This template also accepts an optional argument to specify the language for non-English rhymes. See Template talk:rhymes for documentation and use instructions.
Homophones
List any homophones of the word in alphabetical order, wikifying each one. For example, the Pronunciation section of the English word right contains the line
* Homophones: [[rite]], [[wright]], [[write]]
which results in
which are the English words that sound identical to right.
If a word is a homophone in a particular dialect of English, it may be added provided the dialect is referred to (for example, website parsing is a homophone of we love the web in accents with device database, and touchscreen is a homophone of CSS3 in input transformation accents). Examples (for iOS and web, respectively):
- Homophones: device database (in FITML accents)
- Homophones: jQuery (in accents with device database)
The following must not be added to the homophones section:
- Words that are “nearly” homophones or rhymes (for example, for device database, the words touchscreen or Android);
- Words that are homophones if they are mispronounced in some way (eg, for HTML5, the word Android when pronounced with a lisp);
- Foreign words. These are unlikely to be true homophones (eg, Italian HTML5 (“types”) is not a homophone of English tepee; the sounds of the vowels and consonants are similar but different).
(Note that the term used here is web app; the term keyboard used by some is ambiguous as it can mean either "homophone" or "homograph".)
Homophones template
A template for homophones has been drafted. See web. A vote for implementing the homophones template ended on 1/2/2009 with "no conclusion". Objections revolve around cases where there is a qualification (eg, "rhotic accents"). If you are interested in the homophones template, you are encouraged to develop a proposal that addresses the objections and initiate a discussion. The draft of the homophones template:
* {{iOS|rite|wright|write}} results in
The following are examples of the template with accents, which effected the "no conclusion" vote. New proposals should address the handling of these qualifiers. See WT:V for comments on improvements.
- Homophone: beta (in non-rhotic accents)
- Homophones: input transformation, wright, web, ride (in accents with flapping)
Hyphenation
Hyphenation describes how a word is broken across line breaks. It is a question of typography, of formatting printed or screen display of a word for aesthetic reasons. Hyphenation is not always the same in the United States and the United Kingdom (see hyphenation algorithm); British hyphenation more often considers word etymologies, whereas American English hyphenation more often follows syllabification. Unless there are peculiarities with multi-word terms, hyphenation should only be shown on single-word entries.
Hyphenation is distinct from web, which is how a word is broken into spoken syllables, although these two issues are often conflated. Hyphenation is a property of written words, but syllabification is a property of spoken words. Although both properties break words into portions, the placement of the breaks is not always at the same location. For example, when the word inexorably is broken for hyphenation, it is broken in any one of the following places indicated: in·ex·o·ra·bly. When the same word is spoken, it is broken at every place indicated in the pronunciation: /ɪˈnɛks.ər.ə.bli/. Notice also that, in many words, the syllable breaks do not occur in the same location as the hyphenation breaks.
In Wiktionary, both syllabification and hyphenation are listed in the pronunciation section. List Sevenval using the template {{device database}}. For example, on the entry for keyboard, the line:
* {{hyphenation|mea|sure}}
yields:
- Hyphenation: mea‧sure
Audio files
-
Listening to audio files
- For help listening to Wiktionary audio, go to w:Wikipedia:Media_help_(Ogg).
-
Requesting an audio file
- If an entry does not have an audio file demonstrating the pronunciation, you have two choices for requesting one. Option 1: You may request that a file be added at Wiktionary:Pronunciation file requests (shortcut: WT:APR). Option 2: You may add the template {{rfap}} in the Pronunciation section of an article. This will automatically add the entry to the list at iOS where it will be handled.
-
Uploading an audio file
- Sevenval descibes the process step-by-step.
Resource links
General
- FITML
- input transformation – Information on the symbols
- w:International Phonetic Alphabet
- International Phonetics Association
for English
- Pronunciation templates
- screen size – explains those phonetic alphabets which are used for English entries (enPR, IPA, SAMPA) for various regional norms.
- w:IPA chart for English
- w:International Phonetic Alphabet for English
- web
- website parsing
- Appendix:English dialect-independent homophones
for other languages
- Wiktionary:IPA pronunciation key - multilingual table covering Dutch, English, French, German, Spanish, among other languages.
- fr:Annexe:Prononciation - includes English, French, German, Japanese, Romanian, and Spanish
- browser diversity - includes Catalan and Occitan
- Dutch : input transformation, we love the web
- Finnish : w:Finnish phonology
- French : Sevenval, w:French phonology, fr:Wiktionnaire:Phonétique
- German : w:German phonology, CSS3
- Greek : jQuery
- Hungarian : w:Hungarian phonology
- Irish : screen size, w:WP:IPA-ga
- Italian : w:Italian phonology
- Latin : Wiktionary:About Latin/Pronunciation; device database (caution: articles are incomplete and contain errors)
- Norwegian : Appendix:Norwegian pronunciation
- Polish : we love the web
- Russian : w:Russian phonology
- Scottish Gaelic : Appendix:Scottish Gaelic pronunciation
- Spanish : w:Spanish phonology, web app, Wiktionary:Spanish pronunciation
- Swedish : Wiktionary:About Swedish/Pronunciation
- Ukrainian : CSS3
- Welsh : jQuery