Pronunciation guide for American Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com

All pronunciations in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary are American pronunciations.

In the written pronunciations, the following symbols are used:

Vowels

 

Consonants

i
see
/si/
 
p
pen
/pɛn/

ɪ
sit
/sɪt/
 
b
bad
/bæd/

ɛ
ten
/tɛn/
 
t
tea
/ti/

æ
cat
/kæt/
 

butter
/ˈbʌ

ər/

ɑ
hot
/hɑt/
 
d
did
/dɪd/

ɔ
saw
/sɔ/
 
k
cat
/kæt/

ʊ
put
/pʊt/
 
ɡ
got
/ɡɑt/

u
too
/tu/
 

chin
/tʃɪn/

ʌ
cup
/kʌp/
 

June
/dʒun/

ə
about
/əˈbaʊt/
 
f
fall
/fɔl/


say
/seɪ/
 
v
voice
/vɔɪs/


five
/faɪv/
 
ɵ
thin
/θɪn/

ɔɪ
boy
/bɔɪ/
 
ð
then
/ðɛn/


now
/naʊ/
 
s
so
/soʊ/


go
/ɡoʊ/
 
z
zoo
/zu/

ər
bird
/bərd/
 
ʃ
she
/ʃi/

ɪr
near
/nɪr/
 
ʒ
vision
/ˈvɪʒn/

ɛr
hair
/hɛr/
 
h
how
/haʊ/

ɑr
car
/kɑr/
 
m
man
/mæn/

ɔr
north
/nɔrθ/
 
n
no
/noʊ/

ʊr
tour
/tʊr/
 
ŋ
sing
/sɪŋ/

 
 
 
 
l
leg
/lɛɡ/

 
 
 
 
r
red
/rɛd/

 
 
 
 
y
yes
/yɛs/

 
 
 
 
w
wet
/wɛt/

 
 
 
 
x
Chanukah
/ˈxɑnəkə/

If more than one written pronunciation is given for a word, they are
all acceptable, but the first form given is the most common. Not all
possible American pronunciations are shown in this dictionary. For
example, some speakers only use the sound /ɔ/
when it is followed by /r/ (as in horse
/hɔrs/) and use /ɑ/
in all other words that are shown with /ɔ/
in this dictionary, so that they pronounce both caught
and cot as /kɑt/.

/ ˈ / shows the strong stress in a word
or group of words. It is in front of the part (or syllable)
that you say most strongly. For example, any /ˈɛni/ has a stress on the first syllable;
depend /dɪˈpɛnd/ has a
stress on the second syllable.

/ ˌ / shows a weaker (or secondary) stress. Many
longer words have a syllable that is pronounced with a secondary
stress as well as a syllable with strong (or main)
stress. So in the word pronunciation /prəˌnʌnsiˈeɪʃn/, the main stress is on the syllable /ˈeɪ/, and the secondary stress is on the
syllable /ˌnʌn/.

American speakers use the sound /


/, which is like a quick /d/, in many
words spelled with -t- or -tt-. It is used in
words after a vowel or /r/, and before
an unstressed vowel or syllablic /l/: city
/ˈsɪt̮ɪ
/; parting /ˈpɑrt̮ɪŋ
/; little /ˈlɪt̮l
/.

The sounds / l / and / n / can often be “syllabic” – that is, they can form a syllable by themselves with an extremely reduced vowel. This is shown by the symbols /l̩/ and /n̩/, for example in the words botany /ˈbɑtn̩i/ and finalist /ˈfainl̩ɪst/.

Strong and Weak Forms

Some very common words, for example an, for, of, and
that, have two or more pronunciations: a strong form and one or more weak forms. For
example, for is pronounced /fər/
in the sentence It’s for you. The strong form occurs when the word comes at the end of a sentence
or when it is given special emphasis. For example, for is pronounced /
fɔr/ in Who’s it for? and The present isn’t from Anna, it’s
for her.

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