User:Quidmore/sandbox
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''This is a test of arranging tables in columns''
The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents Japanese language and Okinawan pronunciations in Wikipedia articles. Sounds occurring only as allophones are included for narrow transcription.
See Japanese phonology for a more thorough discussion of the sounds of Japanese.
Examples in the charts are Japanese words transliterated according to the Hepburn romanization system.
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! colspan="3"| Consonants | ||
IPA | Japanese example | English approximation |
---|---|---|
{{IPAlink|b}}
| align="left"| basho | bog | |
{{IPAlink|ç}}
| align="left"| hito | hue | |
{{IPAlink|ɕ}}
| align="left"| shita, shugo | sheep | |
{{IPAlink|d}}
| align="left"| dōmo | dome | |
{{IPAlink|dz}}, {{IPAlink|z}}The fricative {{IPAblink|z}} tends to be used between vowels, and the affricate {{IPAblink|dz}} in pausa, though some speakers use {{IPA|[z]}} everywhere. Before {{IPA|/i/}}, this is palatalized to {{IPAblink|dʑ}}. This is usually represented phonemically as {{IPA|/z/}}. Some dialects maintain a distinction (see yotsugana).
| align="left"| zutto | rods, zen | |
{{IPAlink|dʑ}}
| align="left"| jibun, gojū | jeep | |
{{IPAlink|ɸ}}
| align="left"| fugu | who | |
{{IPAlink|ɡ}}
| align="left"| gakusei | gape | |
{{IPAlink|h}}
| align="left"| hon | hone | |
{{IPAlink|j}}
| align="left"| yakusha | yak | |
{{IPAlink|k}}{{IPA|/p/}}, {{IPA|/t/}}, {{IPA|/k/}} are unaspirated, as in Austronesian and Romance languages, or as in English spy, sty, sky.
| align="left"| kuru | skate | |
{{IPAlink|m}}
| align="left"| mikan | much | |
{{IPAlink|n}}
| align="left"| nattō | not | |
{{IPAlink|ɴ}}
| align="left"| nihon | long | |
{{IPAlink|ŋ}}
| align="left"| ringo, rinku | finger, pink | |
{{IPAlink|p}}
| align="left"| pan | span | |
{{IPAlink|ɽ}}The Japanese r varies between a postalveolar flap {{IPAblink|ɽ}} and an alveolar lateral flap {{IPAblink|ɺ}}.
| align="left"| roku | close to /t/ in auto in American English, or between lock and Scottish rock ({{IPAblink|l}} and {{IPAblink|ɾ}}). | |
{{IPAlink|s}}
| align="left"| suru | sue | |
{{IPAlink|t}}
| align="left"| taberu | stop | |
{{IPAlink|ts}}
| align="left"| tsunami | cats | |
{{IPAlink|tɕ}}
| align="left"| chikai, kinchō | itchy | |
Compressed labio-velar approximantThe Japanese w is not equivalent to a typical IPA {{IPAblink|w}} since it is pronounced with lip compression rather than rounding. The labial spreading diacritic is an extended IPA character.
| align="left"| wasabi | was | |
{{IPAlink|ʔ}}
| align="left" | (in Ryukyu languages) | uh-oh! |
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! colspan="3"| Vowels | ||
IPA | Japanese example | English approximation |
---|---|---|
{{IPAlink|ä|a}}
| align="left"| aru | roughly like father | |
{{IPAlink|e̞|e}}
| align="left"| eki | roughly like met | |
{{IPAlink|i}}
| align="left"| iru | need | |
Voicelessness
| align="left"| yoshi, shita | (almost silent) | |
{{IPAlink|o̞|o}}
| align="left"| oniisan | roughly like sore | |
Close back rounded vowel#Close back compressed_vowelThere is no simple symbol in the IPA for Japanese u, which is neither rounded {{IPAblink|u}} nor unrounded {{IPAblink|ɯ}}, but compressed {{IPA|[ɯ͡β̞]}}. The labial spreading diacritic is an extended IPA character.
| align="left"| unagi | roughly like foot | |
Voicelessness
| align="left"| desu, sukiyaki | (almost silent) |
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! colspan="3"| Suprasegmentals | ||
IPA | Japanese example | English approximation |
---|---|---|
rowspan="2" | {{IPAlink|ː}}
| align="left"| long vowel: | re-equalize | |
align="left"| double consonant: seppuku | big gram (compare big ram) | |
{{IPAlink|ꜜ}}The position of this downstep, which does not occur in all words, varies between dialects, and frequently is not indicated. The downstep is a drop in pitch; the word rises in pitch before the {{IPA|ꜜ}}. When {{IPA|ꜜ}} occurs after the final syllable of a word, any attached grammatical particles will have low tone.
| align="left"| tone drops: | – | |
{{IPAlink|̃}}
| align="left"| nasal vowel: | vin blanc | |
colspan=3|Syllabification | ||
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