O (phoneme)
From Hull AWE
For a note on how AWE organizes its group of articles on vowels, basically by aspects of sound and of writing, see category:vowels.
Few symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet can be described as 'o' or 'o-like'. This page lists them, as they are used in the phonemic description of RP English. Each symbol links to a separate page listing the sounds which it can represent.
There is another page at O (grapheme) which deals with the way the written sign O (or o) is used in writing English in the Roman alphabet, on its own or as part of a digraph. O (grapheme) represents a wide variety of sounds - not all of them represented by 'o-like' symbols in the IPA.
- Monophthong
- /É”Ë/, as in 'all', 'caught' and 'ought'.
- Diphthong
- Two of the commonest sounds represented by '-o-' in written English are shown by IPA symbols that do not themselves resemble 'o':
- The pure /o/ vowel of the IPA is not a sound normally heard in English. Varieties of it are common in Italian, French and the North Germanic languages.
- Much of the information on this page has been taken from McArthur and Bell (2004).