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This is the pronunciation key for IPA transcriptions of Japanese on Wikipedia.
It provides a set of symbols to represent the pronunciation of Japanese in Wikipedia articles, and example words that illustrate the sounds that correspond to them. Integrity must be maintained between the key and the transcriptions that link here; do not change any symbol or value without establishing consensus on the talk page first.
For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For the distinction between [ ], / / and ⟨⟩, see IPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.
Wikipedia key to pronunciation of Japanese

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

Examples in the charts are Japanese words transliterated according to the Hepburn romanization system.

See Japanese phonology for a more thorough discussion of the sounds of Japanese.

Consonants
IPA Example English approximation
Kana Romanization
しょ, , ァージョン basho, kabin, vājon about
びょうき byōki rebuke
と, ひょ hito, hyō hue
た, っしょ shita, isshō sheep
うも, dōmo, dōdō door
[1] ぜん, あん, ッズ zazen, anzen, kizzu[2] cards
[1] ょじょ, かん, ッジ jojo, kanja, ejji[2] judge you
fuji phew!
[3] っこう, りん, んこう gakkō, ringo, ginkō again
ぎょ kigyō argue
ん, はは hon, haha hat
くしゃ, yakusha, yuzu yacht
る, っき kuru, hakki skate
きょうかい, っきょ kyōkai, kekkyoku skew
かん, ぱい, もんも mikan, senpai, monmon much
みゃ myaku mute
っとう, たん nattō, kantan not
わ, んにゃ, ちょう niwa, konnyaku, kinchō canyon
[3] ご, きょく ringo, nankyoku sing
[4] にほ nihon roughly like long
ン, たんぽぽ pan, tanpopo span
っぴょ happyō spew
[5] く, roku, sora American atom
[6] りょうり ryōri American party
る, さっそ suru, sassō soup
べる, とって taberu, totte stop
かい, っちゃ chikai, ketchaku[2] teach you
なみ, っつ tsunami, ittsui[2] cats
[7] さび wasabi roughly like was
[8] いき, , しん fun'iki, denwa, anshin rain
[1] ん, zazen, tsuzuku zoo
[1] かい, じょ mijikai, jojo vision
あつ atsu'! uh-oh
Vowels
IPA Example English approximation
Kana Romanization
aru father
eki bet
iru meet
[9] shita whispered meet
oni story
[10] なぎ unagi shoot
[9] きやき sukiyaki whispered shoot
Suprasegmentals
IPA Description Example English approximation
Long vowel hyōmei, ojiisan Southern British bared (compare bed)
Pitch drop[11] [kaꜜki] (牡蠣, 'oyster'),
[kakiꜜ] (, 'fence')
/ˈmæri/ (marry),
/məˈr/ (Marie)
Syllabification nin'i [ɲiɰ̃.i] higher /ˈh.ər/

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d Voiced fricatives [z,ʑ] are generally pronounced as affricates [dz,] in utterance-initial positions and after the moraic nasal /N/ ([n] before [dz] and [ɲ] before [dʑ]) or the sokuon /Q/ (only in loanwords). Actual realizations of these sounds vary (see Yotsugana).
  2. ^ a b c d When an affricate consonant is geminated, only the closure component of it is repeated: [kiddzɯ,eddʑi,ittsɯi,kettɕakɯ].
  3. ^ a b A declining number of speakers pronounce word-medial /ɡ/ as [ŋ] (Vance 2008:214), but /ɡ/ is always represented as [ɡ] in this system.
  4. ^ The utterance-final nasal is traditionally described as uvular [ɴ], but instrumental studies have found that this is inaccurate and the actual realization varies (Maekawa 2023). However, an alternative transcription has yet to be established, so ⟨ɴ⟩ is used.
  5. ^ Special cases include: (1) utterance-initial positions, where in addition to the tap, the sound can be described as "a kind of weak plosive" (Akamatsu 1997), or "an affricate with short friction, [d̠ɹ̝̆]" (Okada 1999), or sometimes [l] (Labrune 2012); (2) before /i/, where [l] is a particularly common allophone (Labrune 2012) with [ɭ] also found (Labrune 2012); (3) after /N/, which is also a condition for the mentioned plosive or affricate realization (Akamatsu 1997) (Okada 1999). Akamatsu (1997) argues the lateral variants are better described as a tap [ɺ].
  6. ^ [lʲ] and [ɭʲ] are common allophones (Labrune 2012).
  7. ^ [w] is phonetically a bilabial approximant [β̞], but it is traditionally described as a velar [ɰ] or labialized velar [w] approximant and transcribed with ⟨ɰ⟩ or ⟨w⟩ (Maekawa 2020).
  8. ^ The syllable-final n (moraic nasal) is pronounced as some kind of nasalized vowel before a vowel, semivowel ([j,ɰ]) or fricative ([ɸ,s,ɕ,ç,h]). [ɰ̃] is a conventional notation that is undefined for the exact place of articulation (Vance 2008:97).
  9. ^ a b Close vowels [i,ɯ] become voiceless [i̥,ɯ̥] when short and surrounded by voiceless consonants within a word. When the second consonant is [ɸ], [ç], or [h], or when both consonants are fricatives (including the second component of an affricate), devoicing is much less likely to occur (Fujimoto 2015), so vowels in such environments are not transcribed as voiceless (nor are word-final or non-close vowels, whose devoicing is also less consistent). Where close vowels that would be devoiced according to the above rules occur in succession, usually whichever vowel is accented is voiced; if neither is accented, the second is voiced (Fujimoto 2015:189): [kɯꜜɕi̥kɯmo,tsɯ̥kɯɕi]. These rules may be overridden by citing a reliable source that marks devoicing, such as NHK (2016) or Kindaichi & Akinaga (2014), if the word being transcribed appears in it.
  10. ^ [ɯ], romanized u, exhibits varying degrees of rounding depending on dialect. In Tokyo dialect, it is either unrounded or compressed [ɯᵝ], meaning the sides of the lips are held together without horizontal protrusion, unlike protruded [u].
  11. ^ A pitch drop may occur only once per word and does not occur in all words. The mora before a pitch drop has a high pitch. When it occurs at the end of a word, the following grammatical particle has a low pitch.

References

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