A phonemic orthography is an
orthography (system for writing a
language
Language is a structured system of communication. The structure of a language is its grammar and the free components are its vocabulary. Languages are the primary means by which human
Humans (''Homo sapiens'') are the most abundant ...
) in which the
graphemes (written symbols) correspond to the
phonemes (significant spoken sounds) of the language. Natural languages rarely have perfectly phonemic orthographies; a high degree of grapheme-phoneme correspondence can be expected in orthographies based on
alphabet
An alphabet is a standardized set of basic written graphemes (called letters) that represent the phonemes of certain spoken languages. Not all writing systems represent language in this way; in a syllabary, each character represents a ...
ic writing systems, but they differ in how complete this correspondence is.
English orthography, for example, is alphabetic but highly nonphonemic; it was once mostly phonemic during the Middle English stage, when the modern spellings originated, but
spoken English changed rapidly while the orthography was much more stable, resulting in the modern nonphonemic situation. However, because of their relatively recent modernizations compared to English, the
Serbian/
Croatian/
Bosnian/
Montenegrin,
Romanian,
Italian,
Turkish,
Spanish,
Finnish,
Czech,
Latvian,
Esperanto
Esperanto ( or ) is the world's most widely spoken constructed international auxiliary language
An international auxiliary language (sometimes acronymized as IAL or contracted as auxlang) is a language
Language is a structured system ...
,
Korean and
Swahili orthographic systems come much closer to being consistent phonemic representations.
In less formal terms, a language with a highly phonemic orthography may be described as having regular spelling. Another terminology is that of
deep and shallow orthographies, in which the depth of an orthography is the degree to which it diverges from being truly phonemic. The concept can also be applied to nonalphabetic writing systems like
syllabaries.
Ideal phonemic orthography
In an ideal phonemic orthography, there would be a complete one-to-one correspondence (
bijection
In mathematics, a bijection, also known as a bijective function, one-to-one correspondence, or invertible function, is a function between the elements of two sets, where each element of one set is paired with exactly one element of the other ...
) between the graphemes (letters) and the phonemes of the language, and each phoneme would invariably be represented by its corresponding grapheme. So the spelling of a word would unambiguously and transparently indicate its pronunciation, and conversely, a speaker knowing the pronunciation of a word would be able to infer its spelling without any doubt. That ideal situation is rare but exists in a few languages.
A disputed example of an ideally phonemic orthography is the
Serbo-Croatian
Serbo-Croatian () – also called Serbo-Croat (), Serbo-Croat-Bosnian (SCB), Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian (BCS), and Bosnian-Croatian-Montenegrin-Serbian (BCMS) – is a South Slavic language and the primary language of Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia ...
language. In its alphabet (
Latin
Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) around present-day Rome, but through ...
as well as
Serbian Cyrillic alphabet
The Serbian Cyrillic alphabet ( sr, / , ) is a variation of the Cyrillic script
The Cyrillic script ( ), Slavonic script or the Slavic script, is a writing system used for various languages across Eurasia. It is the designated national ...
), there are 30 graphemes, each uniquely corresponding to one of the phonemes. This seemingly perfect yet simple phonemic orthography was achieved in the 19th century—the Cyrillic alphabet first in 1814 by Serbian linguist
Vuk Karadžić, and the Latin alphabet in 1830 by Croatian linguist
Ljudevit Gaj. However, both Gaj's Latin alphabet and Serbian Cyrillic do not distinguish short and long vowels, and non-tonic (the short one is written), rising, and falling tones that Serbo-Croatian has. In Serbo-Croatian, the tones and vowel lengths were optionally written as (in Latin) ⟨e⟩, ⟨ē⟩, ⟨è⟩, ⟨é⟩, ⟨ȅ⟩, and ⟨ȇ⟩, especially in dictionaries.
Another such ideal phonemic orthography is native to
Esperanto
Esperanto ( or ) is the world's most widely spoken constructed international auxiliary language
An international auxiliary language (sometimes acronymized as IAL or contracted as auxlang) is a language
Language is a structured system ...
, employing the language creator L. L. Zamenhof's then-pronounced principle “one letter, one sound”.
There are two distinct types of deviation from this phonemic ideal. In the first case, the exact one-to-one correspondence may be lost (for example, some phoneme may be represented by a
digraph instead of a single letter), but the "regularity" is retained: there is still an
algorithm
In mathematics
Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represen ...
(but a more complex one) for predicting the spelling from the pronunciation and vice versa. In the second case, true irregularity is introduced, as certain words come to be spelled and pronounced according to different rules from others, and prediction of spelling from pronunciation and vice versa is no longer possible. Common cases of both types of deviation from the ideal are discussed in the following section.
Deviations from phonemic orthography
Some ways in which orthographies may deviate from the ideal of one-to-one grapheme-phoneme correspondence are listed below. The first list contains deviations that tend only to make the relation between spelling and pronunciation more complex, without affecting its predictability (see above paragraph).
Case 1: Regular
''Pronunciation and spelling still correspond in a predictable way''
*A phoneme may be represented by a sequence of letters, called a
multigraph, rather than by a single letter (as in the case of the
digraph ''ch'' in French and the
trigraph ''sch'' in German). That only retains predictability if the multigraph cannot be broken down into smaller units. Some languages use diacritics to distinguish between a digraph and a sequence of individual letters, and others require knowledge of the language to distinguish them; compare ''
goatherd'' and ''
loather'' in English.
Examples:
''sch'' versus ''s-ch'' in
Romansch
''ng'' versus ''n'' + ''g'' in
Welsh
''ch'' versus ''çh'' in
Manx Gaelic: this is a slightly different case where the same digraph is used for two different single phonemes.
''ai'' versus ''aï'' in
French
This is often due to the use of an alphabet that was originally used for a different language (the
Latin alphabet
The Latin alphabet or Roman alphabet is the collection of letters originally used by the ancient Romans to write the Latin
Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European ...
in these examples) and so does not have single letters available for all the phonemes used in the current language (although some orthographies use devices such as
diacritics to increase the number of available letters).
*Sometimes, conversely, a single letter may represent a sequence of more than one phoneme (as ''
x'' can represent the sequence /ks/ in English and other languages).
*Sometimes, the rules of correspondence are more complex and depend on adjacent letters, often as a result of historical
sound change
A sound change, in historical linguistics, is a change in the pronunciation of a language. A sound change can involve the replacement of one speech sound (or, more generally, one phonetic feature value) by a different one (called phonetic ch ...
s (as with the rules for the pronunciation of ''ca'' and ''ci'' in
Italian and the
silent ''e'' in English).
Case 2: Irregular
''Pronunciation and spelling do not always correspond in a predictable way''
* Sometimes, different letters correspond to the same phoneme (for instance ''u'' and ''ó'' in
Polish are both pronounced as the phoneme /u/). That is often for historical reasons (the Polish letters originally stood for different phonemes, which later
merged phonologically). That affects the predictability of spelling from pronunciation but not necessarily vice versa. Another example is found in
Modern Greek, whose phoneme /i/ can be written in six different ways: ι, η, υ, ει, οι and υι.
* Conversely, a letter or group of letters can correspond to different phonemes in different contexts. For example, ''
th'' in English can be pronounced as /ð/ (as in ''this'') or /θ/ (as in ''thin''), as well as /th/ (as in ''goatherd'').
*Spelling may otherwise represent a historical pronunciation; orthography does not necessarily keep up with
sound change
A sound change, in historical linguistics, is a change in the pronunciation of a language. A sound change can involve the replacement of one speech sound (or, more generally, one phonetic feature value) by a different one (called phonetic ch ...
s in the spoken language. For example, both the ''k'' and the
digraph ''gh'' of English ''knight'' were once pronounced (the latter is still pronounced in some
Scots varieties), but after the
loss of their sounds, they no longer represent the word's phonemic structure or its pronunciation.
*Spelling may represent the pronunciation of a different
dialect
The term dialect (from Latin
Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) arou ...
from the one being considered.
*Spellings of
loanword
A loanword (also loan word or loan-word) is a word at least partly assimilated from one language (the donor language) into another language. This is in contrast to cognates, which are words in two or more languages that are similar because ...
s often adhere to or are influenced by the orthography of the source language (as with the English words ''ballet'' and ''fajita'', from French and
Spanish respectively). With some loanwords, though, regularity is retained either by
** nativizing the pronunciation to match the spelling (as with the
Russian word шофёр, from French ''chauffeur'' but pronounced in accordance with the normal rules of
Russian vowel reduction; see also
spelling pronunciation
A spelling pronunciation is the pronunciation of a word according to its spelling when this differs from a longstanding standard or traditional pronunciation. Words that are spelled with letters that were never pronounced or that were not pronoun ...
) or by
**
nativizing the spelling (for example, ''football'' is spelt ''fútbol'' in Spanish and ''futebol'' in
Portuguese).
*Spelling may reflect a
folk etymology (as in the English words ''hiccough'' and ''island'', so spelt because of an imagined connection with the words ''cough'' and ''isle''), or distant etymology (as in the English word ''debt'' in which the silent ''b'' was added under the influence of Latin).
* Spelling may reflect
morphophonemic structure rather than the purely phonemic (see next section) although it is often also a reflection of historical pronunciation.
Most orthographies do not reflect the changes in pronunciation known as
sandhi in which pronunciation is affected by adjacent sounds in neighboring words (written
Sanskrit
Sanskrit (; attributively , ; nominally , , ) is a classical language belonging to the Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European languages. It arose in South Asia
South Asia is the southern subregion of Asia
Asia (, ) is one ...
and other
Indian languages, however, reflect such changes). A language may also use different sets of symbols or different rules for distinct sets of vocabulary items such as the Japanese
hiragana
is a Japanese syllabary, part of the Japanese writing system, along with '' katakana'' as well as ''kanji
are the logographic Chinese characters taken from the Chinese script and used in the writing of Japanese. They were made ...
and
katakana syllabaries (and the different treatment in English orthography of words derived from Latin and Greek).
Morphophonemic features
Alphabetic orthographies often have features that are
morphophonemic rather than purely phonemic. This means that the spelling reflects to some extent the underlying
morphological structure of the words, not only their pronunciation. Hence different forms of a
morpheme (minimum meaningful unit of language) are often spelt identically or similarly in spite of differences in their pronunciation. That is often for historical reasons; the morphophonemic spelling reflects a previous pronunciation from before historical
sound change
A sound change, in historical linguistics, is a change in the pronunciation of a language. A sound change can involve the replacement of one speech sound (or, more generally, one phonetic feature value) by a different one (called phonetic ch ...
s that caused the variation in pronunciation of a given morpheme. Such spellings can assist in the recognition of words when reading.
Some examples of morphophonemic features in orthography are described below.
*The English plural morpheme is written ''-s'' regardless of whether it is pronounced as or , e.g. ''cats and dogs'', not ''cats and dogz''. This is because the and sounds are forms of the same underlying
morphophoneme, automatically pronounced differently depending on its environment. (However, when this morpheme takes the form , the addition of the vowel ''is'' reflected in the spelling: ''churches'', ''masses''.)
*Similarly the English past tense morpheme is written ''-ed'' regardless of whether it is pronounced as , or .
*Many English words retain spellings that reflect their
etymology
Etymology () The New Oxford Dictionary of English (1998) – p. 633 "Etymology /ˌɛtɪˈmɒlədʒi/ the study of the class in words and the way their meanings have changed throughout time". is the study of the history
History (derived ...
and morphology rather than their present-day pronunciation. For example, ''sign'' and ''signature'' include the spelling , which means the same but is pronounced differently in the two words. Other examples are ''science'' vs. ''conscience'' , ''prejudice'' vs. ''prequel'' , ''nation'' vs. ''nationalism'' , and ''special'' vs. ''species'' .
*Phonological
assimilation is often not reflected in spelling even in otherwise phonemic orthographies such as Spanish, in which ''obtener'' "obtain" and ''optimista'' "optimist" are written with ''b'' and ''p'', but are commonly
neutralized with regard to voicing and pronounced in various ways, such as both
in neutral style or both
in emphatic pronunciation. On the other hand, Serbo-Croatian (Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian and Montenegrin) spelling reflects assimilation so one writes ''Србија/Srbija'' "Serbia" but ''српски/srpski'' "Serbian".
*The
final-obstruent devoicing that occurs in many languages (such as German, Polish and Russian) is not normally reflected in the spelling. For example, in German, ''Bad'' "bath" is spelt with a final even though it is pronounced , thus corresponding to other morphologically related forms such as the verb ''baden'' (bathe) in which the ''d'' is pronounced . (Compare ', ' ("advice", "advise") in which the ''t'' is pronounced in both positions.)
Turkish orthography, however, is more strictly phonemic: for example, the imperative of ''eder'' "does" is spelled ''et'', as it is pronounced (and the same as the word for "meat"), not ''*ed'', as it would be if German spelling were used.
Korean ''
hangul
The Korean alphabet, known as Hangul, . Hangul may also be written as following South Korea's standard Romanization. ( ) in South Korea
South Korea, officially the Republic of Korea (ROK), is a country in East Asia, constituting t ...
'' has changed over the centuries from a highly phonemic to a largely morphophonemic orthography. Japanese kana are almost completely phonemic but have a few morphophonemic aspects, notably in the use of ぢ ''di'' and づ ''du'' (rather than じ ''ji'' and ず ''zu'', their pronunciation in standard
Tokyo dialect
The Tokyo dialect () is a variety of Japanese language spoken in modern Tokyo
Tokyo (; ja, 東京, , ), officially the Tokyo Metropolis ( ja, 東京都, label=none, ), is the capital and largest city of Japan
Japan ( ja, 日 ...
), when the character is a voicing of an underlying ち or つ. That is from the
rendaku sound change combined with the
yotsugana merger of formally different morae. The
Russian orthography is also mostly morphophonemic, because it does not reflect vowel reduction, consonant assimilation and final-obstruent devoicing. Also, some consonant combinations have silent consonants.
Defective orthographies
A
defective orthography is one that is not capable of representing all the phonemes or phonemic distinctions in a language. An example of such a deficiency in English orthography is the lack of distinction between the voiced and voiceless "th" phonemes ( and , respectively), occurring in words like ''this'' (voiced) and ''thin'' (voiceless) respectively, with both written .
Comparison between languages
Languages whose current orthographies have a high grapheme-to-phoneme and phoneme-to-grapheme correspondence (excluding exceptions due to loan words and assimilation) include:
*
Afrikaans
*
Kurdish
*
Maltese
*
Estonian (apart from palatalization or long and "over-long" phoneme length distinction)
*
Finnish
*
Albanian
*
Georgian
*
Hindi
Hindi (Devanāgarī
Devanagari ( ; , , Sanskrit pronunciation: ), also called Nagari (),Kathleen Kuiper (2010), The Culture of India, New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, , page 83 is a left-to-right abugida
An abugida (, f ...
(apart from schwa deletion)
*
Sanskrit
Sanskrit (; attributively , ; nominally , , ) is a classical language belonging to the Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European languages. It arose in South Asia
South Asia is the southern subregion of Asia
Asia (, ) is one ...
*
Kannada
Kannada (; ಕನ್ನಡ, ), originally romanised Canarese, is a Dravidian language spoken predominantly by the people of Karnataka in southwestern India, with minorities in all neighbouring states. It has around 47 million native ...
*
Telugu
*
Malayalam
Malayalam (; , ) is a Dravidian language spoken in the Indian state of Kerala
Kerala ( ; ) is a States and union territories of India, state on the Malabar Coast of India. It was formed on 1 November 1956, following the passage of ...
*
Dhivehi
*
Turkish (apart from ''ğ'' and various palatal and vowel allophones)
*
Serbo-Croatian
Serbo-Croatian () – also called Serbo-Croat (), Serbo-Croat-Bosnian (SCB), Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian (BCS), and Bosnian-Croatian-Montenegrin-Serbian (BCMS) – is a South Slavic language and the primary language of Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia ...
(
Serbian,
Croatian,
Bosnian and
Montenegrin; written in either
Cyrillic or
Latin
Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) around present-day Rome, but through ...
script)
*
Slovenian
*
Bulgarian
*
Macedonian (if the apostrophe denoting
schwa is counted, though slight inconsistencies may be found)
*
Eastern Armenian (apart from ''o'', ''v'')
*
Basque (apart from palatalized ''l'', ''n'')
*
Haitian Creole
*
Spanish (apart from ''h'', ''x'', ''b''/''v'', and sometimes ''k'', ''c'', ''g'', ''j'', ''z'')
*
Czech (apart from ''ě'', ''ů'', ''y'', ''ý'')
*
Polish (apart from ''ó'', ''ch'', ''rz'' and nasal vowels ''ą'' and ''ę'')
*
Romanian (apart from ''â'' or ''î'' (see
Î versus Â))
*
Ukrainian (mainly phonemic with some other historical/morphological rules, as well as palatalization)
*
Belarusian (phonemic for vowels but mostly morphophonemic for consonants except ''ў'' written phonetically)
*
Swahili (missing aspirated consonants, which do not occur in all varieties and anyway are sparsely used)
*
Mongolian (Cyrillic) (apart from letters representing multiple sounds depending on front or back vowels, the soft and hard sign, silent letters to indicate from and voiced versus voiceless consonants)
*
Azerbaijani (apart from ''k'')
*
Hungarian (apart from ''j'' and ''ly'')
*
Oromo
Many otherwise phonemic orthographies are slightly
defective:
Malay (incl.
Malaysian and
Indonesian),
Italian,
Maltese,
Welsh, and
Kazakh do not fully distinguish their vowels;
Lithuanian,
Latvian, and
Serbo-Croatian
Serbo-Croatian () – also called Serbo-Croat (), Serbo-Croat-Bosnian (SCB), Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian (BCS), and Bosnian-Croatian-Montenegrin-Serbian (BCMS) – is a South Slavic language and the primary language of Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia ...
do not distinguish
tone and vowel length (also additional vowels for Lithuanian and Latvian);
Somali does not distinguish vowel
phonation; and the graphemes ''b'' and ''v'' represent the same phoneme in all varieties of Spanish (except in Valencia), while in the Spanish of the Americas, can be represented by graphemes ''s'', ''c'', or ''z''. Modern Indo-Aryan languages like
Hindi
Hindi (Devanāgarī
Devanagari ( ; , , Sanskrit pronunciation: ), also called Nagari (),Kathleen Kuiper (2010), The Culture of India, New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, , page 83 is a left-to-right abugida
An abugida (, f ...
,
Punjabi,
Gujarati,
Maithili and several others feature
schwa deletion, where the implicit default vowel is suppressed without being explicitly marked as such. Others, like
Marathi, do not have a high grapheme-to-phoneme correspondence for vowel lengths.
French, with its
silent letters and its heavy use of
nasal vowel
A nasal vowel is a vowel
A vowel is a Syllable, syllabic speech sound pronounced without any stricture in the vocal tract. Vowels are one of the two principal classes of speech sounds, the other being the consonant. Vowels vary in quality ...
s and
elision, may seem to lack much correspondence between spelling and pronunciation, but its rules on pronunciation, though complex, are consistent and predictable with a fair degree of accuracy. The phoneme-to-letter correspondence, on the other hand, is often low and a sequence of sounds may have multiple ways of being spelt, often with different meanings.
Orthographies such as those of
German,
Hungarian (mainly phonemic with the exception ''ly'', ''j'' representing the same sound, but consonant and vowel length are not always accurate and various spellings reflect etymology, not pronunciation),
Portuguese, and modern
Greek (written with the
Greek alphabet
The Greek alphabet has been used to write the Greek language
Greek ( el, label= Modern Greek, Ελληνικά, Elliniká, ; grc, Ἑλληνική, Hellēnikḗ) is an independent branch of the Indo-European family of languages, native t ...
), as well as Korean
hangul
The Korean alphabet, known as Hangul, . Hangul may also be written as following South Korea's standard Romanization. ( ) in South Korea
South Korea, officially the Republic of Korea (ROK), is a country in East Asia, constituting t ...
, are sometimes considered to be of intermediate depth (for example they include many morphophonemic features, as described above).
Similarly to French, it is much easier to infer the pronunciation of a German word from its spelling than vice versa. For example, for speakers who merge /eː/ and /ɛː/, the phoneme /eː/ may be spelt ''e'', ''ee'', ''eh'', ''ä'' or ''äh''.
English orthography is highly non-phonemic. The irregularity of English spelling arises partly because the
Great Vowel Shift occurred after the orthography was established; partly because English has acquired a large number of loanwords at different times, retaining their original spelling at varying levels; and partly because the regularisation of the spelling (moving away from the situation in which many different spellings were acceptable for the same word) happened arbitrarily over a period without any central plan. However even English has general, albeit complex, rules that predict pronunciation from spelling, and several of these rules are successful most of the time; rules to predict spelling from the pronunciation have a higher failure rate.
Most
constructed language
A constructed language (sometimes called a conlang) is a language
Language is a structured system of communication. The structure of a language is its grammar and the free components are its vocabulary. Languages are the primary means ...
s such as
Esperanto
Esperanto ( or ) is the world's most widely spoken constructed international auxiliary language
An international auxiliary language (sometimes acronymized as IAL or contracted as auxlang) is a language
Language is a structured system ...
and
Lojban have mostly phonemic orthographies.
The
syllabary systems of
Japanese (
hiragana
is a Japanese syllabary, part of the Japanese writing system, along with '' katakana'' as well as ''kanji
are the logographic Chinese characters taken from the Chinese script and used in the writing of Japanese. They were made ...
and
katakana) are examples of almost perfectly shallow orthography – exceptions include the use of ぢ and づ (
discussed above) and the use of は, を, and へ to represent the sounds わ, お, and え, as relics of
historical kana usage. There is also no indication of pitch accent, which results in homography of words like 箸 and 橋 (はし in hiragana), which are distinguished in speech.
Xavier Marjou uses an
artificial neural network to rank 17 orthographies according to their level of
Orthographic depth. Among the tested orthographies, Chinese and French orthographies, followed by English and Russian, are the most opaque regarding writing (i.e. phonemes to graphemes direction) and English, followed by Dutch, is the most opaque regarding reading (i.e. graphemes to phonemes direction); Esperanto, Arabic, Finnish, Korean, Serbo-Croatian and Turkish are very shallow both to read and to write; Italian is shallow to read and very shallow to write, Breton, German, Portuguese and Spanish are shallow to read and to write.
Realignment of orthography
With time,
pronunciations change and spellings become out of date, as has happened to English and
French. In order to maintain a phonemic orthography such a system would need periodic updating, as has been attempted by various
language regulators and proposed by other
spelling reformers.
Sometimes the pronunciation of a word changes to match its spelling; this is called a
spelling pronunciation
A spelling pronunciation is the pronunciation of a word according to its spelling when this differs from a longstanding standard or traditional pronunciation. Words that are spelled with letters that were never pronounced or that were not pronoun ...
. This is most common with loanwords, but occasionally occurs in the case of established native words too.
In some English personal names and place names, the relationship between the spelling of the name and its pronunciation is so distant that associations between phonemes and graphemes cannot be readily identified. Moreover, in many other words, the pronunciation has subsequently evolved from a fixed spelling, so that it has to be said that the phonemes represent the graphemes rather than vice versa. And in much technical jargon, the primary medium of communication is the written language rather than the spoken language, so the phonemes represent the graphemes, and it is unimportant how the word is pronounced. Moreover, the sounds which literate people perceive being heard in a word are significantly influenced by the actual spelling of the word.
Sometimes, countries have the written language undergo a
spelling reform to realign the writing with the contemporary spoken language. These can range from simple spelling changes and word forms to switching the entire writing system itself, as when
Turkey
Turkey ( tr, Türkiye ), officially the Republic of Türkiye ( tr, Türkiye Cumhuriyeti, links=no ), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the Anatolian Peninsula in Western Asia, with a small portion on the Balkan Peninsula ...
switched from the Arabic alphabet to a
Turkish alphabet of Latin origin.
Phonetic transcription
Methods for phonetic transcription such as the
International Phonetic Alphabet
The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is an alphabet
An alphabet is a standardized set of basic written graphemes (called letters) that represent the phonemes of certain spoken languages. Not all writing systems represent la ...
(IPA) aim to describe pronunciation in a standard form. They are often used to solve ambiguities in the spelling of written language. They may also be used to write languages with no previous written form. Systems like IPA can be used for phonemic representation or for showing more detailed phonetic information (see
Narrow vs. broad transcription).
Phonemic orthographies are different from phonetic transcription; whereas in a phonemic orthography,
allophones will usually be represented by the same grapheme, a purely phonetic script would demand that phonetically distinct allophones be distinguished. To take an example from American English: the sound in the words "table" and "cat" would, in a phonemic orthography, be written with the same character; however, a strictly phonetic script would make a distinction between the
aspirated "t" in "table", the
flap in "butter", the
unaspirated "t" in "stop" and the
glottalized "t" in "cat" (not all these allophones exist in all English
dialect
The term dialect (from Latin
Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) arou ...
s). In other words, the sound that most English speakers think of as is really a group of sounds, all pronounced slightly differently depending on where they occur in a word. A perfect phonemic orthography has one letter per group of sounds (phoneme), with different letters only where the sounds distinguish words (so "bed" is spelled differently from "bet").
A narrow phonetic transcription represents
phones, the sounds humans are capable of producing, many of which will often be grouped together as a single phoneme in any given natural language, though the groupings vary across languages. English, for example, does not distinguish between aspirated and unaspirated consonants, but other languages, like
Korean,
Bengali and
Hindi
Hindi (Devanāgarī
Devanagari ( ; , , Sanskrit pronunciation: ), also called Nagari (),Kathleen Kuiper (2010), The Culture of India, New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, , page 83 is a left-to-right abugida
An abugida (, f ...
do.
The sounds of speech of all languages of the world can be written by a rather small universal phonetic alphabet. A standard for this is the
International Phonetic Alphabet
The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is an alphabet
An alphabet is a standardized set of basic written graphemes (called letters) that represent the phonemes of certain spoken languages. Not all writing systems represent la ...
.
See also
*
Alphabetic principle
*
English-language spelling reform
*
Spelling
*
Morphophonology
*
Orthographic depth
*
Orthographic transcription
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Phonemic Orthography
Orthography
Phonetics
Phonology
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