Help:IPA for Amharic

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

The Amharic letters (ፊደላት) in the last charts have the consonants in rows and the vowels in columns. Each letter is represented by one consonant (or consonant cluster) and one vowel. There are seven written vowels in Amharic with each vowel altering the form of a consonant. All of the consonant-vowel combinations in the first column are called first orders, and the ones in the second column are second orders, and so on. The first order is identical to the letters used in the original Ge'ez before the vocalizations were created centuries ago. The other six orders are alterations of the original Ge'ez letters. Each vowel order alters the Ge'ez letters in a similar way. Though there are many irregularities, the letters of the same order resemble each other in at least one aspect -- the aspect that characterized the order.

Although the Amharic script can form simple syllables with one letter, sometimes it takes multiple letters to form one complex syllable. The complex syllables are formed using the sixth order which serves the purpose of being a vowel carrier and alternatively functions as a mute consonant (without a vowel). For example the Amharic word for "name", ሥም, is one syllable but uses two letters. Although it is pronounced as /sɨm/ it could also be read as /'sɨ.mɨ/. There is no way to distinguish the sixth order's functions in written Amharic.

In the charts below there are certain rows written in grey which indicate that those letters are of the same phonetic value as the previous row written in black. There are multiple ways to write some letters in Amharic as some of the sounds that were once used in Ge'ez are non-existent in modern Amharic. At the cost of redundancy Amharic speakers retain the archaic letters in their orthography in order to preserve the Ge'ez origins of many of their words. Also keep in mind that the English approximations are in some cases very rough, and are only intended to give a general idea of the pronunciation.


Vowels
Vowel Orders IPA Transliteration[1] English Approximation
First Order ɛ~ə ä[2] (e, eh) The e in set (sometimes a schwa)
Second Order ʊ~u u (ou, oo) The "oo" in foot or soon
Third Order i i (ii, ee) The "ea" in seat
Fourth Order ä[2] a (ah) The "o" in cot SAE
Fifth Order (ʲ)e e, é (ie, ié) Similar to "a" in Way except with no glide
Sixth Order ɨ~ə ə (i, ih) The "e" in Roses (sometimes a schwa)
Seventh Order o (ɔ) o (oh or au) The "oa" in Boat (or the au in maul)
Abugida
IPA [3] ɛ u i ä e ɨ o ʷä ʲɛ English approximation Transliteration[1]
b[4]   Bed b
d[5]   Dad d
d͡ʒ   Judge ǧ, j
f Far f
g   Go g
h [6]   How h
h [6]   h,
h [6]   h,
h[7]   h, kh


Abugida (cont.)
IPA [3] ɛ u i ä e ɨ o ʷä ʲɛ English approximation Transliteration[1]
j   Yes y
k   King k
  Ski[8] q, ḳ, k', k
l   Let l
m Match m
n   Now n
ɲ   Onion ň, gn, ñ, ny
p[7][9]   Pin p


Abugida (cont.)
IPA [3] ɛ u i ä e ɨ o ʷä ʲɛ English approximation Transliteration[1]
[7]   Upper[8] p̣, p', p
ɾ ~ r Water SAE r
s   Sight s
s   ś
ʃ   Short š, sh, ʃ, sch
t[5]   Talk t
t͡sʼ   Pizza[8] ṣ, ts, ts', tz, z
t͡sʼ   ṣ́
t͡ʃ   Church č, ch, tʲ


Abugida (cont.)
IPA [3] ɛ u i ä e ɨ o ʷä ʲɛ English approximation Transliteration[1]
t͡ʃʼ   Achoo[8] č̣, č', ch', ch, tsch, ṭʲ
  Stick[8] ṭ, t', t
v ~ β[7]   Vault v
w [10] [10]   Walk w
z   Zoo z
ʒ   Pleasure ž, zh, z, s, j, g
ʔ[11] [6] [7][12]   Uh-oh ʾ , -
ʔ[11] [6]   ʿ, ʾ, -


Labiovelar Abugida
IPA ɛ ~ ɔ[10] u i ä e ɨ ~ ʊ[10] o
   
[13]    
   
kʼʷ    

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 The standard transliteration of the Ethiopian Semitic consonants and vowels are listed first (except for letters used for loanwords).
  2. 2.0 2.1 The letter ä has two functions in this article. When it is shown in IPA (or between slashes) it represents the open central unrounded vowel. When ä is used in the transliteration it represents the first order vowel (usually ɛ).
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 The Abugida uses the IPA pronunciations that are used specifically when reading the alphabet or spelling a word in Amharic. The letters' pronunciations in spoken Amharic sometime differ from the IPA vowels given in this chart (dependent on word and stress).
  4. The በ series is pronounced with the consonant /β/ in between two vowels.
  5. 5.0 5.1 The ደ and ተ series are dentals unlike the English d & t (which are alveolar). The dentals are articulated at the top of the teeth instead of the Alveolar ridge.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 ሀ, ኀ, & ሐ are not pronounced as /hɛ/ nor are አ & ዐ pronounced like /ʔɛ/. Instead they are pronounced as if they were fourth orders (/hä/ & /ʔä/ respectively).
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 The ቨ, ፐ, ጰ series along with the letter ኧ are all used for loan words. Sometimes ኸ is used to represent the Arabic خ in loanwords but ከ is usually used in modern Amharic instead.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 The ejectives have no equivalent in English. The way that ejectives are sounded is by building up pressure in your throat, like when you sneeze, and then release the built-up air as you articulate the consonant where you normally would. So, /t'/ and /t/ are articulated in the same place but the difference is whether you build up pressure or not.
  9. This sound was introduced through loan words. It is sometimes pronounced unaspirated as the "p" in spin and is often confused with the /b/ sound
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 Sometimes when /ɛ/ and /ɨ/ are proceeded by /w/ the rounding carries over and they are pronounced like /wɔ/ and /wʊ/ respectively. Because of this, first and sixth orders of the ወ series are sometimes respelled with seventh and second orders respectively.
  11. 11.0 11.1 The አ and ዐ series have lost their consonantal values and are vowel carriers in modern Amharic. Though sometimes the consonant /ʔ/ is pronounced in word initial and medial positions, the glottal stop is often dropped.
  12. ኧ, being irregular, is not pronounced like 'ʷa but like 'ä and is the only way to write such sound in Amharic.
  13. The modern ኀ isn't a velar. The character was once a velar in ancient Ge'ez, which is why it has a written labial form today, but it became a glottal fricative in modern Amharic. ኀ's labial form is the only way used to write /hʷ/ in Amharic.

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