Pronunciation
Type a word, pick its language. See meaning, examples, and IPA animations.
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers about IPA, CEFR, and how to get the most out of this page.
What is the IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet)?
What does CEFR level (A1, A2, B1, B2, C1, C2) mean?
What is the difference between vowels and diphthongs?
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Explore phonemes
Browse English sounds by category. Tap a card to hear it, or pick an example word to look it up.
Single Vowels
Pure vowel sounds — one mouth position.
- see
- tree
- key
- sit
- ship
- big
- bed
- ten
- met
- cat
- hand
- bag
- father
- hot
- car
- law
- talk
- taught
- put
- book
- look
- blue
- food
- school
- cup
- mud
- run
- about
- sofa
- again
- her
- bird
- learn
Vowel Combinations
Diphthongs — the mouth moves between two positions.
- my
- time
- eye
- now
- how
- cow
- say
- day
- eight
- go
- no
- show
- boy
- toy
- join
Plosives
Air is stopped, then released with a small burst.
- pretty
- plant
- pen
- ball
- bat
- bug
- top
- tea
- time
- dog
- drink
- dad
- cat
- key
- cake
- go
- get
- give
Nasals
Air flows through the nose.
- moon
- man
- milk
- now
- no
- nice
- song
- king
- ring
Fricatives
Air squeezes through a narrow gap, creating friction.
- fish
- fan
- food
- van
- voice
- view
- think
- thin
- three
- this
- that
- the
- sun
- see
- sit
- zoo
- zip
- zero
- ship
- shoe
- she
- measure
- vision
- beige
- hat
- house
- happy
Approximants
The tongue gets close to a position without touching.
- light
- look
- love
- red
- run
- rain
- water
- week
- win
- yes
- you
- year
Affricates
A stop immediately followed by a fricative.
- chair
- cheese
- chip
- jump
- juice
- joke
Tap
A quick tap of the tongue, common in American English.
- butter
- water
- ladder