How many vowels does English have?

Monday, September 8th, 2008

If you’re like most English-speakers, you’re an English-reader, and you think that English has five, sometimes six, vowels — a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes y — because the English alphabet has five, sometimes six, vowels.

But if you look at how dictionaries “respell” English words for pronunciation, you quickly realize that English — even if we look only at a single dialect, like General American English — has many, many vowels — including not just monophthongs, or pure vowels, but diphthongs and triphthongs composed of multiple vowel sounds.

International Phonetic Alphabet Examples
æ pat, lad, cat, ran
e? pay, day
??r care, hair, there
?? father, palm
?r arm
? let, head
i? bee, see
? pit, city
a? pie, by, my
??r pier, near, here
? pot, not, wasp
o? toe, no
?? caught, paw, war
?? noise, boy
? took, put
??r tour
u? boot, soon, through
a? out, now
? cut, run, enough
?r urge, term, firm, word, heard, bird
? about, item, edible, gallop, circus
?r butter, winner
ju? pupil
ø, œ feu, oeuf (French), schön, zwölf (German)
y tu (French), über (German)
y?, ? bon (French)

Looking at all those crazy IPA spellings is enough to make you feel like a ghoti out of water.

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