IPA in AWE - consonants

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This is a table of the consonant sounds of English and their representation as used in AWE. For an explanation of our usage, see IPA in AWE. You may also want to see IPA in AWE - vowels.

IPA symbol used English words Phonetic description Notes
b bed, able, pub voiced bilabial plosive .
p put, lapped, up unvoiced bilabial plosive
t take, written at voiced dental plosive t and d were traditionally known as 'dentals'. (NED remarked in 1884 "The English t and d are not strictly dental, they are alveolar". The alveolus is the 'tooth-ridge'
d do, added, red unvoiced dental plosive
g go, ragged, egg voiced velar plosive The so-called hard '-g-' in traditional terms, not to be confused with /dʒ/
k cat, kick, ache unvoiced velar plosive Sometimes written '-c', traditionally called hard '-c-' - not to be confused with /s/
f fat, soft, off unvoiced labio-dental fricative
v from, after, of, give voiced labio-dental fricative
θ think, Cuthbert, both, unvoiced dental fricative sometimes realized as /f/ in British accents, e.g. 'fink' for 'think' in Cockney.
ð that, whether, breathe voiced dental fricative sometimes realized as /v/ in British accents, e.g. 'muvver' for 'mother' in Cockney.
ʃ shop, station, cash unvoiced palato-alveolar fricative
chop, catching, such unvoiced palato-alveolar affricate given as č in American transcriptions such as Fromkin and Rodman
judge, rigid, edge voiced palato-alveolar affricate given as ǰ or J̌ in American transcriptions such as Fromkin and Rodman
ʒ genre, rouge voiced palato-alveolar fricative French '-j-' sound; rare in English.
Do not confuse with /j/
s so, rest, face, 'cross unvoiced alveolar fricative Sometimes written as the so-called soft '-c-' in traditional terms.
z zoo, crazy, lose voiced alveolar fricative
h have, oho, he voiced glottal fricative Realized more strongly in some some accents than others (see Dropping the h).
m man, commit, thumb bilabial nasal
n now, morning, man alveolar nasal
ŋ hang, singing, morning velar nasal In some accents, realised as separate consonants: /sɪŋgɪŋg/ ('sinGinG') and in others as /in/ (see Dropping the g)
l lie, selling, well lateral continuant
traditionally 'a liquid'
Sometimes realized as the 'dark -l-', /l/ as in RP 'peel'
r write, error, correct post-alveolar approximant, or frictionless continuant Many variations. In RP, often not realized in final position. Trilled in many accents. See also rhotic.
[vowel]r visitor, perfect, learn This is how AWE indicates rs that are pronounced in rhotic accents and not sounded in non-rhotic accents
w win, one, owing labio-velar semi-vowel (voiced) Can be heard in some speakers' realization of such words as 'going' (/ˈgəʊ wɪŋ/).
j yesterday, yacht palatal semi-vowel (voiced) Can be heard in some speakers' realization of such words as 'saying' (/seɪjɪŋg/
Do not confuse with /ʒ/).
Table adapted from Crystal (1995).

You may also want to see IPA in AWE - vowels.

There are also some consonants that appear in various accents if not in RP that it is convenient to list here:
IPA symbol used English words Phonetic description Notes
ʍ when, what, who labio-velar semi-vowel (unvoiced) not realized in most speakers of RP; a feature of such accents as Scots.
χ loch (Scots), lough (Irish) voiceless uvular fricative Most RP speakers realize this as /k/
ʁ - Voiced uvular fricative The 'French', or guttural, '-r-'; only used in English by those who affect a foreign realization of foreign words, usually French.