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  1. The interactive IPA chart helps you identify the sounds of language. To use the phoneme chart, first familiarize yourself with each IPA symbol and the corresponding IPA pronunciation of the sound. For example, in the IPA vowel chart, click on each symbol to hear the corresponding vowel sound, and begin practicing pronouncing the sounds yourself.

  2. www.ipachart.comIPA Chart

    Interactive IPA Chart The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is a set of symbols that linguists use to describe the sounds of spoken languages. This page lets you hear the sounds that the symbols represent, but remember that it is only a rough guide.

  3. IPA Chart With Sounds. Note: We have a new version of the IPA chart with sounds available here. Listen to each of the sounds from the International Phonetic Alphabet. Click on a symbol to hear the associated sound.

  4. Learn how to pronounce the sounds of the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) with audio illustrations from various languages. This webpage provides an interactive tool to explore the IPA chart and listen to the examples.

  5. ɥ. Voiced labial-palatal approximant. ɧ. Simultaneous ʃ and x. ʜ. Voiceless epiglottal fricative. Affricates and double articulations can be represented by two symbols joined by a tie bar if necessary. ʢ. Voiced epiglottal fricative/approximant.

  6. It provides a standardized representation of the sounds of spoken language. Both consonants and vowels have both a manner and place of articulation. You can learn more about the IPA on Wikipedia. Click on the symbols below for audio samples of consonants and vowels.

  7. The Sound of English IPA chart for the 2021 edition is below. Click on the sounds to hear them: Variations. Many different versions of the standard British English IPA chart exist, with each major dictionary displaying some variation. ‘The Sound of English’ uses a similar set of symbols to the OED (Oxford English Dictionary).