Difference between revisions of "Language/Icelandic/Pronunciation/Alphabet-and-Pronunciation"

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* I and Y share the same pronunciation, as    do Í and Ý.
* I and Y share the same pronunciation, as    do Í and Ý.
* HV is pronounced as KV in the standard    language, but in some areas it is pronounced as Scots WH.
* J, L, M, N, and R are voiceless before H    and in most areas before K, P, and T (no English equivalent)
* L and R are voiceless at the end of a word
* There are no silent letters in Icelandic.,    though in spoken language some letters might produce a different sound    than usual.
* Double BB, DD, GG, RR, and SS are    pronounced for longer than their monograph equivalents.
* Double FF is pronounced as English F.
* Double LL is pronounced something like tl.
* Double MM and NN are often pronounced as    pm and tn.
* Double KK, PP, and TT are pronounced with    an H to their left and pronounced for longer than their monograph    equivalents.
* If a K is followed by a t, it is pronounced    similarly to a Spanish j (e.g. lukt - lantern).
* Likewise, a P followed by a t changes into    an f sound (e.g. Að skipta - to shift).
* F in the middle of a word is often    pronounced as a v (e.g. Að skafa - to shave).
* If you are not able to type in Icelandic letters,    you can substitute Ð with DH, Þ with TH, Æ with AE, and Á, É, Í, Ó, Ö, Ú,    Ý with AA, EE, II, OO, OE, UU, YY.
== Dipthongs ==
{| class="wikitable"
|Dipthong
|Sound
|-
|au
|Pronounced as öi
|-
|Ei, ey
|like the  ay in stay
|}
== Stress ==
Stress in Icelandic always falls on the first syllable. 


== Alphabet and IPA pronunciation ==
== Alphabet and IPA pronunciation ==

Revision as of 10:29, 2 October 2021

Icelandic-Language-PolyglotClub.png
Pronunciation Guide in Icelandic

The Icelandic alphabet consists of 32 letters. There are also three letters used for foreign words, and one obsolete letter. Icelandic uses the latin alphabet, which is the same as the English alphabet and most Western European languages. There are some letters that are not found in English, and even some letters that only Icelandic uses.

Below are tables of the Icelandic alphabet and its pronunciation. (To listen to it go here: https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/File:Is-Icelandic_alphabet.oga)

Alphabet

Upper case Lower case Name
A a a
Á á á
B b
D d
Ð ð
E e e
É é é
F f eff
G g
H h
I i i
Í í í
J j joð
K k
L l ell
M m emm
N n enn
O o o
Ó ó ó
P p
R r err
S s ess
T t
U u u
Ú ú ú
V v vaff
X x ex
Y y ypsilon y
Ý ý ypsilon ý
Þ þ þorn
Æ æ æ
Ö ö ö

Letters C, Q, and W

Letters C, Q, and W are not part of the Icelandic alphabet, but are used in foreign words:

Upper case Lower case Name
C c
Q q
W w tvöfalt vaff

The final letter, Z,

The final letter, Z, is no longer used in Icelandic as of 1973. However, it is used only in very rare cases preserved in historic names of structures, organizations, and the like, such as Verzló (a school in Reykjavík).

Upper case Lower case Name
Z z seta

And of course, letters C, Q, and W are used more often than letter Z is.

How the letters are pronounced (in English)

Letter Explanation
A is like "a" in "bar", "tar" and "car"
Á is like "ou" in "house", "about" and "shout"
B same as English P, but without the puff of air, as in "spit"
D same as English T, but without the puff of air, as in "stick"
Ð is like "th" in "feather", "father" and "that", but as the last letter of a word it is like "th" in "thin".
E same as in English except that it's always short, like in "bed" and "end"
É same as English "yay"
F same as in English "from"; like "p" in "hip" before n
G like "k" in "wick" at the beginning of a word or between a vowel and -l, -n; /ɣ/ after vowels, before a, u, ð, r, and when it's the last character of a word; like "ch" in Scottish "loch" after vowels and before t, s; like "y" in "young" between vowel and -i, -j; dropped between a, á, ó, u, ú
H same as in English "hello"
I is like the first "i" in "inside" and "impossible"
Í like an English "ee" and the "i" in "Maria" and the "y" in "diary"
J is like "y" in "yes", "yogurt" and "yield"
K same as in English "king"
L same as in English "love"
M same as in English "mom"
N same as in English "never"
O like "a" in British English "all" and "o" in "bolt"
Ó is like "o" in "sole" and like "oa" in "goat" and "soap"
P generally same as in English "Peter", but can be softer
R generally same as in Scottish English, virtually identical to a Spanish rolled R, from the very front of the mouth
S same as in English "soup"
T same as in English "time"
U virtually identical to a French "u" (as in "cul"), or a German "ü" (as in "über"). Equivalent to English "i" as in "kit", but with the lips rounded
Ú like English "oo" as in "zoo"
V between English V and W
X same as in English "six"
Y exactly like Icelandic "i", it's only a matter of spelling
Ý exactly like Icelandic "í", it's only a matter of spelling
Þ like English "th" in "thunder", "theatre" and "thong"
Æ is like the name of the letter "i" in English or the sound of the letters "ai" in the words "Thai food". Hi/hæ & bye/bæ are the same in English and Icelandic
Ö like German "ö" and English "u" in "urgent" or "fur". Equivalent to English "e" as in "bed", but with the lips rounded

Notes

  • Icelandic words never begin with Ð, and no words end with Þ.
  • I and Y share the same pronunciation, as do Í and Ý.
  • HV is pronounced as KV in the standard language, but in some areas it is pronounced as Scots WH.
  • J, L, M, N, and R are voiceless before H and in most areas before K, P, and T (no English equivalent)
  • L and R are voiceless at the end of a word
  • There are no silent letters in Icelandic., though in spoken language some letters might produce a different sound than usual.
  • Double BB, DD, GG, RR, and SS are pronounced for longer than their monograph equivalents.
  • Double FF is pronounced as English F.
  • Double LL is pronounced something like tl.
  • Double MM and NN are often pronounced as pm and tn.
  • Double KK, PP, and TT are pronounced with an H to their left and pronounced for longer than their monograph equivalents.
  • If a K is followed by a t, it is pronounced similarly to a Spanish j (e.g. lukt - lantern).
  • Likewise, a P followed by a t changes into an f sound (e.g. Að skipta - to shift).
  • F in the middle of a word is often pronounced as a v (e.g. Að skafa - to shave).
  • If you are not able to type in Icelandic letters, you can substitute Ð with DH, Þ with TH, Æ with AE, and Á, É, Í, Ó, Ö, Ú, Ý with AA, EE, II, OO, OE, UU, YY.

Dipthongs

Dipthong Sound
au Pronounced as öi
Ei, ey like the ay in stay

Stress

Stress in Icelandic always falls on the first syllable. 

Alphabet and IPA pronunciation

Icelandic is a North Germanic language spoken in Iceland where it is the national language.

Here are the letters and how to pronounce them:

Letter A a B b D d E e F f G g H h I i J j K k L l M m N n O o P p R r S s T t U u V v X x Y y Á á Æ æ É é Í í Ð ð Ó ó Ö ö Ú ú Ý ý Þ þ
Name a e eff ge i joð ell emm enn o err ess u vaff ex ufsilon y á æ é í ó ö ú ufsilon ý þorn
IPA [aː] [pjeɛ̯] [tjeɛ̯] [eɛ̯] [ɛfː] [cjeɛ̯] [häu̯] [ɪː] [joɔ̯ð̠] [kʰäu̯] [ɛtːl̥] [ɛmː] [ɛnː] [oɔ̯] [pʰjeɛ̯] [ɛrː] [ɛsː] [tʰjeɛ̯] [ʏː] [vafː] [ɛxs] [ˈʏfsɪlɔn ɪː] [äu̯] [ai̯] [jeɛ̯] [iː] [eɛ̯ð̠] [ou̯] [œː] [uː] [ˈʏfsɪlɔn iː] [θ̠ɔrːtn̥]
Audio

Add Audio

Video: Pronunciation

Sources

Book: Learn to Speak Icelandic: without even trying, Stephen Hernandez'