IPA Vowel Symbols

Complete reference to International Phonetic Alphabet vowel symbols — understanding the vowel quadrilateral, cardinal vowels, tongue position, and how vowels differ across world languages.

Understanding Vowel Representation

Unlike consonants, which are categorized by specific points of obstruction in the vocal tract, vowels are produced with relatively open airflow. The IPA represents vowels based on three primary dimensions:

  • Height (vertical axis): How close the tongue is to the roof of the mouth — close/high, mid, or open/low
  • Backness (horizontal axis): Whether the tongue is positioned toward the front or back of the mouth
  • Roundedness: Whether the lips are rounded or unrounded

The IPA vowel chart is often called the "vowel quadrilateral" because it approximates the shape of the oral cavity when viewed from the side.

Cardinal Vowels

Daniel Jones established the cardinal vowel system in the early 20th century as reference points for describing vowels in any language. These are not vowels from any specific language but rather auditory/articulatory targets that define the vowel space.

Primary Cardinal Vowels (1–8)

Eight primary cardinal vowels
Number IPA Symbol Description Approximate Example
1iClose front unroundedFrench "si", Spanish "sí"
2eClose-mid front unroundedFrench "été", Spanish "peso"
3ɛOpen-mid front unroundedEnglish "bed", French "mère"
4aOpen front unroundedSpanish "casa", Italian "la"
5ɑOpen back unroundedEnglish "father" (RP)
6ɔOpen-mid back roundedBritish English "thought"
7oClose-mid back roundedFrench "beau", Spanish "solo"
8uClose back roundedSpanish "tú", French "tout"

Secondary Cardinal Vowels (9–16)

Same tongue positions as primary vowels but with opposite lip rounding:

  • y — Close front rounded (German "über", French "tu")
  • ø — Close-mid front rounded (French "peu", German "schön")
  • œ — Open-mid front rounded (French "peur", German "Köln")
  • ɶ — Open front rounded (rare; found in some German dialects)
  • ɒ — Open back rounded (British English "lot")
  • ʌ — Open-mid back unrounded (English "strut")
  • ɤ — Close-mid back unrounded (Vietnamese, Estonian)
  • ɯ — Close back unrounded (Japanese /u/, Turkish, Korean)

Complete IPA Vowel Chart

Full IPA vowel quadrilateral
Height Front Unrounded Front Rounded Central Back Unrounded Back Rounded
Close i, ĩ y, ỹ ɨ, ʉ ɯ u, ũ
Near-close ɪ ʏ ʊ
Close-mid e, ẽ ø, ø̃ ɘ, ɵ ɤ o, õ
Mid ø̞ ə, ə̃
Open-mid ɛ, ɛ̃ œ, œ̃ ɜ, ɞ ʌ ɔ, ɔ̃
Near-open æ ɐ
Open a, ã ɶ ä ɑ, ɑ̃ ɒ

Note: Tilde ( ̃ ) indicates nasalization. Some vowels listed have nasal counterparts important in languages like French, Portuguese, and Polish.

English Vowel Inventory

Standard American English (General American)

GA English monophthongs
IPA Example Word Transcription Description
ifleece/flis/Close front unrounded
ɪkit/kɪt/Near-close front unrounded
eface/fes/Close-mid front (often diphthong [eɪ])
ɛdress/drɛs/Open-mid front unrounded
ætrap/træp/Near-open front unrounded
ɑlot, palm/lɑt/, /pɑm/Open back unrounded (merged in GA)
ɔthought/θɔt/Open-mid back rounded
ogoat/ɡot/Close-mid back (often diphthong [oʊ])
ʊfoot/fʊt/Near-close back rounded
ugoose/ɡus/Close back rounded
ʌstrut/strʌt/Open-mid back unrounded
ɝnurse/nɝs/R-colored mid central (rhotic)
əabout/əˈbaʊt/Mid central (schwa)
ɚletter/ˈlɛtɚ/R-colored schwa (rhotic)

British English (Received Pronunciation)

Key differences from General American:

  • ɒ vs. ɑ — RP maintains lot-palm split: "lot" /lɒt/ vs. "palm" /pɑːm/
  • Non-rhotic: No /ɹ/ after vowels; "nurse" is /nɜːs/ not /nɝs/
  • Length distinctions: More consistent vowel length differences (ː marker)

Vowels in World Languages

Three-Vowel Systems (Minimal)

Example: Classical Arabic

  • /i/ — Close front
  • /a/ — Open central
  • /u/ — Close back

This triangular system represents the three corner vowels with maximum acoustic distinctiveness.

Five-Vowel Systems (Very Common)

Example: Spanish, Japanese, Swahili

  • /i/ — Close front unrounded
  • /e/ — Close-mid front unrounded
  • /a/ — Open central unrounded
  • /o/ — Close-mid back rounded
  • /u/ — Close back rounded

Front Rounded Vowels

French: /y ø œ/ in "tu" /ty/, "peu" /pø/, "peur" /pœʁ/

German: /y ø œ/ in "über" /ˈyːbɐ/, "schön" /ʃøːn/, "Köln" /kœln/

Turkish: /y ø/ in "üzüm" /yˈzym/ (grape)

Nasal Vowels

French: /ɛ̃ œ̃ ɔ̃ ɑ̃/ in "vin" /vɛ̃/, "un" /œ̃/, "bon" /bɔ̃/, "blanc" /blɑ̃/

Portuguese: Five oral + five nasal vowel pairs

Polish: /ɛ̃ ɔ̃/ written ⟨ę, ą⟩

Complex Vowel Systems

Danish: 25+ vowel phonemes including front rounded and length/quality distinctions

English: 14–20 vowel phonemes depending on dialect

German: 16 vowel phonemes (8 short, 8 long pairs)

Diphthongs and Triphthongs

What Are Diphthongs?

Diphthongs are vowel sounds that glide from one quality to another within a single syllable. They're transcribed with two vowel symbols.

English Diphthongs

Common English diphthongs
IPA Example Transcription Movement
price/praɪs/Open front → close front
mouth/maʊθ/Open front → close back
ɔɪchoice/tʃɔɪs/Open-mid back → close front
face/feɪs/Close-mid front → close front
goat/ɡoʊt/Close-mid back → close back

Triphthongs

Three vowel qualities in one syllable (rare in English):

  • aɪə — "fire" /faɪə/ (when not reduced to /faɪɚ/)
  • aʊə — "hour" /aʊə/ (British RP)

Diphthongs in Other Languages

German: /aɪ aʊ ɔɪ/ in "mein" /maɪn/, "Haus" /haʊs/, "Häuser" /ˈhɔɪzɐ/

Italian: Has rising diphthongs like /je/ in "pieno" /ˈpjɛno/

Mandarin: Extensive diphthong system including /ai au ei ou/

The Schwa (ə) — Most Common Vowel

The schwa /ə/ is the most frequently occurring vowel sound in English and many other languages. It's a mid-central vowel produced with minimal tongue/lip effort.

Characteristics

  • Always unstressed in English
  • Neutral position: Tongue relaxed in center of mouth
  • Reduced vowel: Result of vowel reduction in unstressed syllables

English Schwa Examples

  • about — /əˈbaʊt/ (first syllable)
  • sofa — /ˈsoʊfə/ (second syllable)
  • pencil — /ˈpɛnsəl/ (second syllable)
  • camera — /ˈkæmərə/ (both unstressed syllables)

R-Colored Schwa (ɚ)

In rhotic English dialects (American, Canadian, Irish):

  • father — /ˈfɑðɚ/
  • butter — /ˈbʌtɚ/
  • never — /ˈnɛvɚ/

Vowel Features and Modifications

Length

  • ː — Long: Finnish "tuli" /tuli/ (fire) vs. "tuuli" /tuːli/ (wind)
  • ˑ — Half-long: Estonian distinctions
  • ̆ — Extra-short

Nasalization

  • ◌̃ — Nasalized: French "bon" /bɔ̃/, Portuguese "mão" /mɐ̃w̃/

Rhoticity

  • ɚ — R-colored schwa (American English "father")
  • ɝ — R-colored mid-central (American English "bird")

Tone (on vowels)

  • á — High tone (Mandarin mā má mǎ mà)
  • à — Low tone
  • ā — Mid tone
  • ǎ — Rising tone
  • â — Falling tone

Learning IPA Vowels

Practice Strategies

  1. Start with your native language: Identify vowels you already produce
  2. Use audio resources: IPA charts with recordings from phonetics labs
  3. Practice minimal pairs: "bit" /bɪt/ vs. "beat" /bit/
  4. Learn cardinal vowels: Master the reference points first
  5. Record yourself: Compare your production to native speakers

Common Confusions

  • /i/ vs. /ɪ/: "sheep" vs. "ship"
  • /e/ vs. /ɛ/: Spanish "peso" vs. English "pet"
  • /ɑ/ vs. /ɔ/: "cot" vs. "caught" (merged in some dialects)
  • /u/ vs. /ʊ/: "pool" vs. "pull"

Resources

  • Interactive IPA Chart: internationalphoneticassociation.org
  • UCLA Phonetics Lab Archive: Vowel recordings from 200+ languages
  • English IPA Practice: Cambridge Dictionary, Oxford Learner's Dictionary