English orthography comprises the set of rules used when writing the English language, allowing readers and writers to associate written graphemes with the sounds of spoken English, as well as other features of the language. English's orthography includes norms for spelling, hyphenation, capitalisation, word breaks, emphasis, and punctuation.

As with the orthographies of most other world languages, written English is broadly standardised. This standardisation began to develop when movable type spread to England in the late 15th century. However, unlike with most languages, there are multiple ways to spell every phoneme, and most letters also represent multiple pronunciations depending on their position in a word and the context.

This is partly due to the large number of words that have been loaned from a large number of other languages throughout the history of English, without successful attempts at complete spelling reforms, and partly due to accidents of history, such as some of the earliest mass-produced English publications being typeset by highly trained, multilingual printing compositors, who occasionally used a spelling pattern more typical for another language. For example, the word ghost was spelled gost in Middle English, until the Flemish spelling pattern was unintentionally substituted, and happened to be accepted. Most of the spelling conventions in Modern English were derived from the phonemic spelling of a variety of Middle English, and generally do not reflect the sound changes that have occurred since the late 15th century (such as the Great Vowel Shift).

Despite the various English dialects spoken from country to country and within different regions of the same country, there are only slight regional variations in English orthography, the two most recognised variations being British and American spelling, and its overall uniformity helps facilitate international communication. On the other hand, it also adds to the discrepancy between the way English is written and spoken in any given location.

Function of letters

Phonemic representation

Letters in English orthography positioned at one location within a specific word usually represent a particular phoneme. For example, at /ˈæt/ consists of 2 letters ⟨a⟩ and ⟨t⟩, which represent /æ/ and /t/, respectively.

Sequences of letters may perform this role as well as single letters. Thus, in thrash /θræʃ/, the digraph ⟨th⟩ (two letters) represents /θ/, and the digraph ⟨sh⟩ represents /ʃ/. In hatch /hætʃ/, the trigraph ⟨tch⟩ represents /tʃ/.

Less commonly, a single letter can represent multiple successive sounds. The most common example is ⟨x⟩, which normally represents the consonant cluster /ks/ (for example, in tax /tæks/).

The same letter (or sequence of letters) may be pronounced differently when occurring in different positions within a word. For instance, ⟨gh⟩ represents /f/ at the end of some words (tough /tʌf/) but not in others (plough /plaʊ/). At the beginning of syllables, ⟨gh⟩ is pronounced /ɡ/, as in ghost /ɡoʊst/. Conversely, ⟨gh⟩ is never pronounced /f/ in syllable onsets other than in inflected forms, and is almost never pronounced /ɡ/ in syllable codas (the proper name Pittsburgh is an exception).

Some words contain silent letters, which do not represent any sound in modern English pronunciation. Examples include the ⟨l⟩ in talk, half, calf, etc., the ⟨w⟩ in two and sword, ⟨gh⟩ as mentioned above in numerous words such as though, daughter, night, brought, and the commonly encountered silent ⟨e⟩ (discussed further below).

Word origin

Another type of spelling characteristic is related to word origin. For example, when representing a vowel, ⟨y⟩ represents the sound /ɪ/ in some words borrowed from Greek (reflecting an original upsilon), whereas the letter usually representing this sound in non-Greek words is the letter ⟨i⟩. Thus, myth /ˈmɪθ/ is of Greek origin, while pith /ˈpɪθ/ is a Germanic word. However, a large number of Germanic words have ⟨y⟩ in word-final position, especially when deriving from an Old English -iġ (modern -y).

Some other examples are ⟨ph⟩ pronounced /f/ (which is most commonly ⟨f⟩), and ⟨ch⟩ pronounced /k/ (which is most commonly ⟨c⟩ or ⟨k⟩). The use of these spellings for these sounds often marks words that have been borrowed from Greek.

Some researchers, such as Brengelman (1970), have suggested that, in addition to this marking of word origin, these spellings indicate a more formal level of style or register in a given text, although Rollings (2004) finds this point to be exaggerated as there would be many exceptions where a word with one of these spellings, such as ⟨ph⟩ for /f/ (like telephone), could occur in an informal text.

Homophone differentiation

Spelling may also be useful to distinguish in written language between homophones (words with the same pronunciation but different meanings), and thus resolve potential ambiguities that would arise otherwise. However in most cases the reason for the difference is historical, and it was not introduced to resolve ambiguity.

Examples

  • heir and air are pronounced identically in most dialects, but spelled differently.
  • pain and pane are both pronounced /peɪn/ but have two different spellings of the vowel /eɪ/. This arose because the two words were originally pronounced differently: pain used to be pronounced as /peɪn/, with a diphthong, and pane as /peːn/, but the diphthong /eɪ/ merged with the long vowel /eː/ in pane, making pain and pane homophones (panepain merger). Later /eː/ became a diphthong /eɪ/.
  • break and brake: (She's breaking the car vs. She's braking the car).

Nevertheless, many homophones remain that are unresolved by spelling (for example, the word bay has at least five fundamentally different meanings).

Marking sound changes in other letters

Some letters in English provide information about the pronunciation of other letters in the word. Rollings (2004) uses the term "markers" for such letters. Letters may mark different types of information.

⟨e⟩ often marks an altered pronunciation of a preceding vowel. In the pair mat and mate, the ⟨a⟩ of mat has the value /æ/, whereas the ⟨a⟩ of mate is marked by the ⟨e⟩ as having the value /eɪ/. In this context, the ⟨e⟩ is not pronounced, and is referred to as a "silent e".

Also, ⟨e⟩ in once /ˈwʌns/ indicates that the preceding ⟨c⟩ is pronounced /s/, rather than the more common value of ⟨c⟩ in word-final position as the sound /k/, such as in attic /ˈætɪk/.

A single letter may even fill multiple pronunciation-marking roles simultaneously. For example, in the word ace, ⟨e⟩ marks not only the change of ⟨a⟩ from /æ/ to /eɪ/, but also of ⟨c⟩ from /k/ to /s/. In the word vague, ⟨e⟩ marks the long ⟨a⟩ sound, but ⟨u⟩ keeps the ⟨g⟩ hard rather than soft.

Doubled consonants usually indicate that the preceding vowel is pronounced short. For example, the doubled ⟨t⟩ in batted indicates that the ⟨a⟩ is pronounced /æ/, while the single ⟨t⟩ of bated gives /eɪ/. Doubled consonants only indicate any lengthening or gemination of the consonant sound itself when they come from different morphemes, as with the ⟨nn⟩ in unnamed (un+named).

Multiple functionality

Any given letters may have dual functions. For example, ⟨u⟩ in statue has a sound-representing function (representing the sound /u/) and a pronunciation-marking function (marking the ⟨t⟩ as having the value // opposed to the value /t/).

Underlying representation

Like many other alphabetic orthographies, English spelling does not represent non-contrastive phonetic sounds (that is, minor differences in pronunciation which are not used to distinguish between different words).

Although the letter ⟨t⟩ is pronounced by most speakers with aspiration [tʰ] at the beginning of words, this is never indicated in the spelling, and, indeed, this phonetic detail is probably not noticeable to the average native speaker not trained in phonetics.

However, unlike some orthographies, English orthography often represents a very abstract underlying representation (or morphophonemic form) of English words.

[T]he postulated underlying forms are systematically related to the conventional orthography ... and are, as is well known, related to the underlying forms of a much earlier historical stage of the language. There has, in other words, been little change in lexical representation since Middle English, and, consequently, we would expect ... that lexical representation would differ very little from dialect to dialect in Modern English ... [and] that conventional orthography is probably fairly close to optimal for all modern English dialects, as well as for the attested dialects of the past several hundred years.

In these cases, a given morpheme (i.e., a component of a word) has a fixed spelling even though it is pronounced differently in different words. An example is the past tense suffix -⟨ed⟩, which may be pronounced variously as /t/, /d/, or /ᵻd/ (for example, pay /ˈpeɪ/, payed /ˈpeɪd/, hate /ˈheɪt/, hated /ˈheɪtɪd/). As it happens, these different pronunciations of -⟨ed⟩ can be predicted by a few phonological rules, but that is not the reason why its spelling is fixed.

Another example involves the vowel differences (with accompanying stress pattern changes) in several related words. For instance, photographer is derived from photograph by adding the derivational suffix -⟨er⟩. When this suffix is added, the vowel pronunciations change largely owing to the moveable stress:

SpellingPronunciation
photograph/ˈfoʊtəɡræf/ or /ˈfoʊtəɡrɑːf/
photographer/fəˈtɒɡrəfər/
photographical/ˌfoʊtəˈɡræfɪkəl/

Other examples of this type are the -⟨ity⟩ suffix (as in agile vs. agility, acid vs. acidity, divine vs. divinity, sane vs. sanity). See also: Trisyllabic laxing.

Another example includes words like mean /ˈmiːn/ and meant /ˈmɛnt/, where ⟨ea⟩ is pronounced differently in the two related words. Thus, again, the orthography uses only a single spelling that corresponds to the single morphemic form rather than to the surface phonological form.

English orthography does not always provide an underlying representation; sometimes it provides an intermediate representation between the underlying form and the surface pronunciation. This is the case with the spelling of the regular plural morpheme, which is written as either -⟨s⟩ (as in tat, tats and hat, hats) or -⟨es⟩ (as in glass, glasses). Here, the spelling -⟨s⟩ is pronounced either /s/ or /z/ (depending on the environment, e.g., tats /ˈtæts/ and tails /ˈteɪlz/) while -⟨es⟩ is usually pronounced /ᵻz/ (e.g. classes /ˈklæsᵻz/). Thus, there are two different spellings that correspond to the single underlying representation |z| of the plural suffix and the three surface forms. The spelling indicates the insertion of /ᵻ/ before the /z/ in the spelling -⟨es⟩, but does not indicate the devoiced /s/ distinctly from the unaffected /z/ in the spelling -⟨s⟩.

The abstract representation of words as indicated by the orthography can be considered advantageous since it makes etymological relationships more apparent to English readers. This makes writing English more complex, but arguably makes reading English more efficient. However, very abstract underlying representations, such as that of Chomsky & Halle (1968) or of underspecification theories, are sometimes considered too abstract to accurately reflect the communicative competence of native speakers. Followers of these arguments believe the less abstract surface forms are more "psychologically real" and thus more useful in terms of pedagogy.

Diacritics

Some English words can be written with diacritics; these are mostly loanwords, usually from French. As vocabulary becomes naturalised, there is an increasing tendency to omit the accent marks, even in formal writing. For example, rôle and hôtel originally had accents when they were borrowed into English, but now the accents are almost never used. The words were originally considered foreign—and some people considered that English alternatives were preferable—but today their foreign origin is largely forgotten. Words most likely to retain the accent are those atypical of English morphology and therefore still perceived as slightly foreign. For example, café and pâté both have a pronounced final ⟨e⟩, which would otherwise be silent under the normal English pronunciation rules. Moreover, in pâté, the acute accent is helpful to distinguish it from pate.

Further examples of words sometimes retaining diacritics when used in English are: ångström—partly because its symbol is ⟨Å⟩—appliqué, attaché, blasé, bric-à-brac, Brötchen, cliché, crème, crêpe, fiancé(e), flambé, jalapeño, naïve, naïveté, né(e), papier-mâché, passé, piñata, protégé, résumé, risqué, and voilà. Italics, with appropriate accents, are generally applied to foreign terms that are uncommonly used in or have not been assimilated into English: for example, adiós, belles-lettres, crème brûlée, pièce de résistance, raison d'être, and vis-à-vis.

It was formerly common in American English to use a diaeresis to indicate a hiatus, e.g. coöperate, daïs, and reëlect. The New Yorker and Technology Review magazines still use it for this purpose, even as general use became much rarer. Instead, modern orthography generally prefers no mark (cooperate) or a hyphen (co-operate) for a hiatus between two morphemes in a compound word. By contrast, use of diaereses in monomorphemic loanwords such as naïve and Noël remains relatively common.

In poetry and performance arts, accent marks are occasionally used to indicate typically unstressed syllables that should be stressed when read for dramatic or prosodic effect. This is frequently seen with the -ed suffix in archaic and pseudoarchaic writing, e.g. cursèd indicates the ⟨e⟩ should be fully pronounced. The grave being to indicate that an ordinarily silent or elided syllable is pronounced (warnèd, parlìament).

Ligatures

In certain older texts (typically British), the use of the ligatures ⟨æ⟩ and ⟨œ⟩ is common in words such as archæology, diarrhœa, and encyclopædia, all of Latin or Greek origin. Nowadays, the ligatures have been generally replaced by the digraphs ⟨ae⟩ and ⟨oe⟩ (encyclopaedia, diarrhoea) in British English or just ⟨e⟩ (encyclopedia, diarrhea) in American English, though both spell some words with only ⟨e⟩ (economy, ecology) and others with ⟨ae⟩ and ⟨oe⟩ (paean, amoeba, oedipal, Caesar). In some cases, usage may vary; for instance, both encyclopedia and encyclopaedia are current in the UK.

Phonic irregularities

Partly because English has never had any official regulating authority for spelling, such as the Spanish Real Academia Española, the French Académie française, the German Council for German Orthography, the Danish Sprognævn, and the Thai Royal Society, English spelling is considered irregular and complex compared to that of other languages. Although French, Danish, and Thai, among other languages, present a similar degree of difficulty when encoding (writing), English is more difficult when decoding (reading), as there are clearly many more possible pronunciations of a group of letters. For example, in French, /u/ (as in "true", but short), can be spelled ⟨ou, ous, out, oux⟩ (ou, nous, tout, choux), but the pronunciation of each of those sequences is always the same. However, in English, while /uː/ can be spelled in up to 24 different ways, including ⟨oo, u, ui, ue, o, oe, ou, ough, ew⟩ (spook, truth, suit, blues, to, shoe, group, through, crew) (see Sound-to-spelling correspondences below), all of these spellings have other pronunciations as well (e.g., foot, us, build, bluest, so, toe, grout, plough, sew). Thus, in unfamiliar words and proper nouns, the pronunciation of some sequences, ⟨ough⟩ being the prime example, is unpredictable even for educated native speakers.

Spelling irregularities

Attempts to regularize or reform the spelling of English have usually failed. However, Noah Webster promoted more phonetic spellings in the United States, such as flavor for British flavour, fiber for fibre, defense for defence, analyze for analyse, catalog for catalogue, and so forth. These spellings already existed as alternatives, but Webster's dictionaries helped standardize them in the United States. (See American and British English spelling differences for details.)

Besides the quirks the English spelling system has inherited from its past, there are other irregularities in spelling that make it tricky to learn. English contains, depending on dialect, 24–27 consonant phonemes and 13–20 vowels. However, there are only 26 letters in the modern English alphabet, so there is not a one-to-one correspondence between letters and sounds. Many sounds are spelled using different letters or multiple letters, and for those words whose pronunciation is predictable from the spelling, the sounds denoted by the letters depend on the surrounding letters. For example, ⟨th⟩ represents two different sounds (the voiced and voiceless dental fricatives) (see Pronunciation of English th), and the voiceless alveolar sibilant can be represented by ⟨s⟩ or ⟨c⟩.

It is, however, not (solely) the shortage of letters which makes English spelling irregular. Its irregularities are caused mainly by the use of many different spellings for some of its sounds, such as /uː/,/iː/ and /oʊ/ (too, true, shoe, flew, through; sleeve, leave, even, seize, siege; stole, coal, bowl, roll, old, mould), and the use of identical sequences for spelling different sounds (over, oven, move).

Furthermore, English no longer makes any attempt to anglicise the spellings of loanwords, but preserves the foreign spellings, even when they do not follow English spelling conventions like the Polish ⟨cz⟩ in Czech (rather than *Check) or the Norwegian ⟨fj⟩ in fjord (although fiord was formerly the most common spelling). In early Middle English, until roughly 1400, most imports from French were respelled according to English rules (e.g. bataillebattle, boutonbutton, but not double, or trouble). Instead of loans being respelled to conform to English spelling standards, sometimes the pronunciation changes as a result of pressure from the spelling, e.g. ski, adopted from Norwegian in the mid-18th century. It used to be pronounced /ʃiː/, similar to the Norwegian pronunciation, but the increasing popularity of the sport after the mid-20th century helped the /skiː/ pronunciation replace it.[citation needed]

There was also a period when the spelling of a small number of words was altered to make them conform to their perceived etymological origins. For example, ⟨b⟩ was added to debt (originally dette) to link it to the Latin debitum, and ⟨s⟩ in island to link it to Latin insula instead of its true origin, the Old English word īġland. ⟨p⟩ in ptarmigan has no etymological justification whatsoever, only seeking to show Greek origin despite being a Gaelic word.

The spelling of English continues to evolve. Many loanwords come from languages where the pronunciation of vowels corresponds to the way they were pronounced in Old English, which is similar to the Italian or Spanish pronunciation of the vowels, and is the value the vowel symbols ⟨a, e, i, o, u⟩ have in the International Phonetic Alphabet. As a result, there is a somewhat regular system of pronouncing "foreign" words in English,[citation needed] and some borrowed words have had their spelling changed to conform to this system. For example, Hindu used to be spelled Hindoo, and the name Maria used to be pronounced like the name Mariah, but was changed to conform to this system. This only further complicates the spelling, however. On the one hand, words that retained anglicised spellings may be misread in a hyperforeign way. On the other hand, words that are respelled in a 'foreign' way may be misread as if they are English words, e.g. Muslim was formerly spelled Mooslim because of its original pronunciation.

Commercial advertisers have also had an effect on English spelling. They introduced new or simplified spellings like lite instead of light, thru instead of through, and rucsac instead of rucksack.[citation needed] The spellings of personal names have also been a source of spelling innovations: diminutive versions of women's names that sound the same as men's names have been spelled differently: Nikki and Nicky, Toni and Tony, Jo and Joe. The differentiation in between names that are spelled differently but have the same phonetic sound may come from modernisation or different countries of origin. For example, Isabelle and Isabel sound the same but are spelled differently; these versions are from France and Spain respectively.

As an example of the irregular nature of English spelling, ⟨ou⟩ can be pronounced (depending on vowel mergers) in as many as nine different ways: /aʊ/ in out, /oʊ/ in soul, // in soup, /ʌ/ in touch, /ʊ/ in could, /ɔː/ in four, /ɜː/ in journal, /ɒ/ in cough, and /ə/ in famous (See Spelling-to-sound correspondences). In the other direction, // can be spelled in at least 18~21 different ways: be (cede), ski (machine), bologna (GA), algae, quay, beach, bee, deceit, people, key, keyed, field (hygiene), amoeba, chamois (GA), dengue (GA), beguine, guyot, and ynambu (See Sound-to-spelling correspondences). (These examples assume a more-or-less standard non-regional British English accent. Other accents will vary.)

Sometimes everyday speakers of English change counterintuitive spellings, with the new spellings usually not judged to be entirely correct. However, such forms may gain acceptance if used enough. An example is the word miniscule, which still competes with its original spelling of minuscule, though this might also be because of analogy with the word mini.

⟨ough⟩ words

The tetragraph ⟨ough⟩ can be pronounced in at least ten different ways, six of which are illustrated in the construct, Though the tough cough and hiccough plough him through, which is quoted by Robert A. Heinlein in The Door into Summer to illustrate the difficulties facing automated speech transcription and reading. Ough itself is a word, an exclamation of disgust similar to ugh, though rarely known or used. The following are typical pronunciations of this string of letters:

  • /oʊ/ (as in so) in though and dough
  • /ʌf/ (as in cuff) in tough, rough, enough, and the name Hough
  • /ɒf/ (as in off) in trough, cough, and Gough
  • /uː/ (as in blue) in through
  • /ɔː/ (as in saw) in thought, ought, sought, nought, brought, etc.
  • /ə/ (as in comma) in thorough, borough, and names ending in -borough; however, American English pronounces this as /oʊ/
  • /aʊ/ (as in how) in bough, sough, drought, plough (plow in North America), doughty, and the names Slough and Doughty
  • /ɒx/ (as in loch; mainly in words of Gaelic origin) in the word lough (an anglicised variant of loch used in Ireland) and in Irish place names, such as Ardclough, Glendalough, Loughmoe, Loughrea, etc.

The following pronunciations are found in uncommon single words:

  • hough: /ɒk/ (more commonly spelled "hock" now)
  • hiccough (a now-uncommon variant of hiccup): /ʌp/ as in up
  • Oughterard (Irish place name): /uːx/

The place name Loughborough uses two different pronunciations of ⟨ough⟩: the first ⟨ough⟩ has the sound as in cuff and the second rhymes with thorough.

Spelling-to-sound correspondences

Notes:

  • In the tables, the hyphen has two different meanings. A hyphen after the letter indicates that it must be at the beginning of a syllable, e.g., ⟨j⟩- in jumper and ajar. A hyphen before the letter indicates that it cannot be at the beginning of a word, e.g., -⟨ck⟩ in sick and ticket.
  • More specific rules take precedence over more general ones, e.g., "⟨c⟩- before ⟨e, i, y⟩" takes precedence over "⟨c⟩".
  • Where the letter combination is described as "word-final", inflectional suffixes may be added without changing the pronunciation, e.g., catalogues.
  • The dialects used are Received Pronunciation and General American. When pronunciations differ idiosyncratically, a pronunciation that only applies to one of the dialects is noted as being (RP) or (GA). When pronunciations differ systematically in a way that is not accounted for by the diaphonemic transcription system (i.e. the trap-bath and lot-cloth splits), the pronunciations in both dialects are given.
  • Isolated foreign borrowings are excluded.
  • ∅ means the letter is silent

Consonants

SpellingMajor value (IPA)Examples of major valueOther valuesExamples of other values
b, bb/b/bit, ebb, limber, bombe, obtain, blood, bringcomb, bdellium, debtor, doubt
cbefore ⟨e, i, y, ae⟩/s/cellar, city, cyst, face, prince, nicer, caesium/tʃ/cello, vermicelli
/ʃ/special, liquorice
/ʒ/coercion
/k/Celts, chicer, syncing
/ts/letovicite
word initial before ⟨n, t⟩cnidarian, ctenoid
elsewhere/k/cat, cross, predict, opuscule, picture/s/facade, muscle
victual, indict, blancmange
ccbefore ⟨e, i, y⟩/ks/accept, eccentric, occidental/k/soccer, recce, siccing
/tʃ/bocce, breccia, cappuccino
/s/flaccid
elsewhere/k/account, accrue, occur, yucca
chafter ⟨n⟩/tʃ/branch, franchise, enchant, enchilada, chinchilla/k/inchoate, synchronise, elasmobranch
/ʃ/penchant, trenchant
/(t)ʃ/truncheon
in words of Greek origin/k/chasm, chimera, chord, lichendrachm
in words of Modern French origin/ʃ/chaise, machine, cached, parachute/k/chemist, choir, machination
/tʃ/chassis (GA), cheque, chowder, niche (GA)
elsewhere/tʃ/chase, chin, attached, chore/k/ache, anchor, leprechaun
/ʃ/machete, pistachio, welch
/h/chutzpah (also with /x/)
/dʒ/sandwich, Greenwich
/x/loch (Scottish English)
yacht, Crichton
ck/k/tack, ticketblackguard
d, dd, dhbefore /uː//dʒ/graduate, gradual (both also /dj/ in conservative RP)
⟨-ed⟩ after a fortis sound/t/ached, creased, iced, puffed, raked
elsewhere/d/dive, ladder, jodhpurs
/ð/gorsedd, edh
Wednesday, handsome, sandwich, ceilidh
dgbefore ⟨e, i, y⟩ or a suffix/dʒ/lodger, pidgin, edgy, abridgment, acknowledgment, judgment, lodgment, fledgling
resulting from a compound word/dɡ/headgear
f, ff/f/fine, off, affinity/v/of
gbefore ⟨e, i, y, ae, eo⟩/dʒ/gel, pager, algae (GA), gin, gentle, rage, gigantic, regimen, geography/ɡ/get, eager, algae (RP), gig
/ʒ/genre, barrage, gigue, regime
before ⟨m⟩phlegmy, diaphragm/ɡ/pigmy
/ʒ/judgment
elsewhere/ɡ/go, great, leg, margaric/dʒ/margarine, gaol
/x/witgat
ggbefore ⟨e⟩/ɡ/dagger, smuggest, staggering/ɡdʒ/suggest (GA)
/dʒ/agger, exaggerate, suggest (RP)
elsewhere/ɡ/giggle, egg, ziggurat, beggar/dʒ/arpeggio, veggies
ghword-initialghost, ghastly, ghetto
elsewheredaughter, through, fraught, brougham eight, higher, straight, sighed/ə/ /oʊ/burgh
/x/ /k/lough, saugh
/k/hough
/f/laughter, trough, draught, rough
/ɡ/burgher, aghast, yogh
/ɡh/leghorn, pigheaded
/p/hiccough
gn/n/gnome, signed, poignant, reign/ɡn/signet, indignant
hsyllable-initial/h/honey, heist, house, manhandle doohickey, vehicular/j/posthumous (RP)
/w/Nahuatl
honest, heir, hours, piranha, annihilate, vehicle, dinghy, exhaust, herb (GA)
elsewhereoh, ohm, rhubarb, rhyme/tʃ/sinh
j/dʒ/jump, ajar jonquil, Julian jalap, cajole bijugate/j/Hallelujah, fjord
/ʒ/jongleur, julienne, bijou
/h/jalapeno, fajita
marijuana
k, kk, kh/k/key, bake, trekking, sheikh, weeknight
kn/n/knee, knife, knock, beknave, camiknickers/kn/knish, Knoebel
l, ll/l/valve, balcony, almost, valley, flotilla, line, colonyhalve, balk, salmon
/j/tortilla
/r/colonel (in rhotic accents)
m, mmword-initial before ⟨n⟩mnemonic
elsewhere/m/mine, hammer
mbmorpheme-finalclimber, numbing, bombed/mb/nimb
elsewhere/mb/number, tumble
n, nnword-final after ⟨m⟩hymn, autumn, damningly
before /k,ɡ//ŋ/inkling, bangle, anchor, minx/n/incline, vanguard, mankind
elsewhere/n/nice, funny, enzyme monsignor, damnable, tin/ŋ/anxiety
monsieur
ngbefore ⟨th, s⟩/ŋ(k)/strength, amongst
morpheme-final/ŋ/long, tongue, kingly, singer, clingy/ŋɡ/longer, strongest
word-initial/əŋɡ/ngana, ngultrum, Nguni/n/ngaio, Ngati
otherwise/ŋɡ/congress, singly, finger, language/nɡ/congrats, engage, vanguard
/ndʒ/binging, wharfinger, dingy, engaol, stingy/ŋ/hangar, lingonberry, angst
/nʒ/ingenue, lingerie
p, ppword-initial before ⟨n, s, t⟩pneumonia, psyche, ptomaine/p/psst
elsewhere/p/pill, happy, soup, corpse, scriptcoup, corps, receipt, raspberry
ph, pph/f/photograph, sapphire/v/Stephen
/p/shepherd
/ph/kniphofia, drophead
apophthegm
qin words of Chinese origin/tʃ/qi, qigong, guqin
elsewhere/k/Iraq, waqf, yaqona, mbaqanga, qiviut
r, rr, rh, rrhbefore a consonant finally before final ⟨e⟩/r/, ∅ in non-rhoticcart, hurt fir, walker, tear, burr, myrrh caresarsaparilla, forecastle, surprise (some GA)
elsewhere/r/ray, parrot, rhyme, diarrhoeairon, croissant (RP), hors d'oeuvre (some pronunciations)
See below for combinations of vowel letters and ⟨r⟩
sword-final -⟨s⟩ morpheme after a fortis sound/s/pets, shops
word-final -⟨s⟩ morpheme after a lenis sound/z/ines
between vowels/z/phrases, prison, pleasing/s/bases, bison, leasing
/ʒ/vision, closure
elsewhere/s/song, ask, misled/z/is, lens, raspberry
/ʃ/sugar, tension
island, aisle, debris, mesne
scbefore ⟨e, i, y⟩/s/scene, scepter, scissors, scythe/sk/sceptic, scirrhus
/ʃ/fascism
/z/crescent (RP), discern
schin words of Middle or modern French origin/ʃ/schedule (RP), schist, eschalot/sk/eschar
elsewhere/sk/school, scheme, schizoid, ischemia/sk/ /s/ /ʃ/schism (RP)
/stʃ/mischief, eschew
sh/ʃ/shin, fashion, wish, Lewisham, foreshore, kinship/sh/mishap, mishit
/zh/hogshead
/sʃ/tranship
/ʃh/threshold
/s/dishonour
ssafter an prefix ending ⟨-s⟩/ss/disseat, misspell, missort
elsewhere/s/boss, assign, narcissus dissert, posses, brassier, finesse, cesspool, missout/ʃ/tissue, passion
/ʒ/rescission, scissure
/z/dessert, possess, brassiere, scissor
sw/sw/swore, swan, swift/s/sword, answer
/zw/menswear
coxswain
t, ttin -⟨sten, stle⟩hasten, listens, rustling, thistles/t/tungsten, listless
elsewhere/t/ten, bitter, etiology, nastier, tune, piteous, cation, softer, wallet, gristmill, haste, dishearten/ʃ/ration, martial, cautious
/tʃ/bastion, nature, fortune, righteous
/ʒ/equation, transition (RP)
/d/kindergarten (GA)
/θ/tanh
soften, ballet, Christmas, mortgage
tchresulting from a compound word/ttʃ/shortchange
elsewhere/tʃ/batch, kitchen
th/θ/absinthe/t/thyme
/tθ/eighth
/ð/bother, soothe/th/outhouse, potherb (RP)
/tʃ/posthumous
asthma
v, vv/v/vine, heavy, savvy, reveled, revved
wbefore ⟨r⟩wrong, wrist, awry
elsewhere/w/sward, swerve, waletwo, sword, answer, gunwale
/v/Weltanschauung, witgat
wh-before ⟨o⟩/h/who, whole/w/whopping, whorl
elsewhere/w/wheel/f/whew (RP), whanau
wr/r/wrench
xword- or morpheme-initial/z/xylophone, xenon, axenic, chromoxylography/ɪɡz/Xavier
between word-initial ⟨e⟩ and a vowel/ɡz/example, exist, exotic, exult, existential, exultation, exit/ks/exabyte, execute, exoplanet
in words of Chinese or Mesoamerican origin/ʃ/sanxian, xiangqi, macpalxochitl, xoloitzcuintle/ks/axolotl
/z/Xanadu
elsewhere/ks/boxes, mixes, expect, taxation, tuxedo, proximity, jinxed, next, six, taxi/ɡz/Alexander, auxiliary
/ɡʒ/luxury (GA) anxiety
/kʃ/anxious, luxury (RP), sexual (GA) luxurious
/z/plateaux, chateaux
faux-pas, roux
/h/Oaxaca
xcbefore ⟨e, i⟩/ks/excellent, except, excited
xh/ksh/exhale, foxhole/ks/exhibition, Vauxhall
/ɡz/exhaust, exhibit, exhilarating, exhortation
/ksj/, /ɡzj/exhume
y/j/yes, young/ð/ye (mock archaic)
z, zzafter ⟨t⟩/s/waltz, ditzy, pretzel, tzatziki/z/tzar
elsewhere/z/gazump, seized, crazier, rhizoophagous, pizzazz, zoo, quiz/ʒ/azure, seizure, brazier (GA)
/ts/schizophrenic, pizzas
/dz/jiaozi
rendezvous

Vowels

In a generative approach to English spelling, Rollings (2004) identifies twenty main orthographic vowels of stressed syllables that are grouped into four main categories: "Lax" (similar to the "short" vowels taught in classrooms), "Tense" (the "long vowels"), "Heavy" (their correlated <r>-colored vowel sound), and "Tense-R" (the second and third combined).

LetterLax (short)Tense (long)HeavyTense-R
IPAexampleIPAexampleIPAexampleIPAexample
a/æ/man/eɪ/mane/ɑːr/mar/ɛər/mare
e/ɛ/met/iː/mete/ɜːr/her/ɪər/here
i/ɪ/win/aɪ/wine/ɜːr/fir/aɪər/fire
o/ɒ/mop/oʊ/mope/ɔːr/for/ɔːr/fore
u/ʌ/hug/juː/huge/ɜːr/cur/jʊər/cure
/ʊ/push/uː/rude/ʊər/sure
DigraphLaxTenseHeavyTense-R
IPAexampleIPAexampleIPAexampleIPAexample
ai, ay/eɪ/bait/ɛər/air
essayAyr
au, aw/ɔː/audio/ɔːr/aura
drawrawr
ea/ɛ/dreamt/iː/dream/ɜːr/learn/ɪər/hear
ee/iː/see/ɪər/beer
eu, ew/juː/feudal/jʊər/neurotic
fewNewry
oa/oʊ/boat/ɔːr/soar
oo/ʊ/foot/uː/goose/ʊər/poor
/ɔːr/floor
ou, ow/ʌ/southern/aʊ/south/ɜːr/scourge/aʊər/hour
nowdowry
/oʊ/soul/ɔːr/four
/ɒ/knowledgeknow
oi, oy/ɔɪ/point/ɔɪər/coir
boyMoyra

For instance, ⟨a⟩ can represent the lax vowel /æ/, tense /eɪ/, heavy /ɑː/, or tense-r /ɛə/. Heavy and tense-r vowels are the respective lax and tense counterparts followed by ⟨r⟩.

Tense vowels are distinguished from lax vowels with a "silent" ⟨e⟩ that is added at the end of words. Thus, ⟨a⟩ in hat is lax /æ/, but when ⟨e⟩ is added in the word hate ⟨a⟩ is tense /eɪ/. Heavy and tense-r vowels follow a similar pattern, e.g. ⟨ar⟩ in car is heavy /ɑːr/, ⟨ar⟩ followed by silent ⟨e⟩ in care is /ɛər/. ⟨u⟩ represents two different vowel patterns, one being /ʌ,juː,ɜː,jʊər/, the other /ʊ,uː,ʊər/. There is no distinction between heavy and tense-r ⟨o⟩, and ⟨u⟩ in the /ʊ,uː,ʊər/ pattern does not have a heavy vowel.

Besides silent ⟨e⟩, another strategy for indicating tense and tense-r vowels is the addition of another orthographic vowel forming a digraph. In this case, the first vowel is usually the main vowel while the second vowel is the "marking" vowel. For example, man has a lax ⟨a⟩ (/æ/), but the addition of ⟨i⟩ (as the digraph ⟨ai⟩) in main marks the ⟨a⟩ as tense (/eɪ/). These two strategies produce words that are spelled differently but pronounced identically, which helps differentiate words that would otherwise be homonyms, as in mane (silent ⟨e⟩ strategy), main (digraph strategy) and Maine (both strategies).

Besides the 20 basic vowel spellings, Rollings (2004) has a reduced vowel category (representing the sounds /ə,ɪ/) and a miscellaneous category (representing the sounds /ɔɪ,aʊ,aɪ/ and /j/+V, /w/+V, V+V).

Combinations of vowel letters excluding those followed by ⟨r⟩

To reduce dialectal difficulties, the sound values given here correspond to the conventions at Help:IPA/English. This table includes ⟨h, w, y⟩ when they represent vowel sounds. If no information is given, it is assumed that the vowel is in a stressed syllable.

Deriving the pronunciation of an English word from its spelling requires not only a careful knowledge of the rules given below (many of which are not explicitly known even by native speakers: speakers merely learn the spelling of a word along with its pronunciation) and their many exceptions, but also:

  • a knowledge of which syllables are stressed and which are unstressed (not derivable from the spelling: compare hallow and allow)
  • which combinations of vowels represent monosyllables and which represent disyllables (ditto: compare waive and naive, creature and creator)

The underscore (_) in a vowel-consonant-⟨e⟩ spelling is the place where the next spelling in a word goes in.

The pronunciation of vowel letters when followed by ⟨r⟩ is covered in a separate table below.

SpellingMajor value (IPA)Examples of major valueMinor valuesExamples of minor valueExceptions
ain closed syllables before multiple consonants final vowel in word/æ/hatchet, banner, tally acrobat, cat/eɪ/ancient, chamber, pastry, bass/ɒ/ yacht, restaurant /ɛ/ catch (GA) /ʌ/ apsaras ∅ forecastle
/ɑː/ (RP), /æ/ (GA)aft, ask, dance, past
followed by 2+ unstressed syllables next syllable contains /ɪ,ə/national, camera, reality acid, granite, palace/eɪ/nationhood, scathingly basis, aphasic∅ sarsaparilla
in open syllables before single consonant before heterosyllabic vowel/eɪ/ache, opaque, savor, status table, hatred, April chaos, aorta, mosaic/æ/plaque, manor, statue macle, sacrifice, theatrical/ɛ/ many, any /aɪ/ naive (also with /ɑː/) /ʌ/ sati
/ɑː/debacle gala, lava, slalom, sonata
before final -⟨nge, ste⟩range, exchange, haste/æ/flange, caste (GA)
/ɑː/melange
after /w/ except before /k,ɡ,ŋ/ closed syllables/ɒ/want, watch, swamp, swastika, wallet/ɒ/ (RP), /ɔː/ (GA) /ɔː/ /eɪ/squash, wasp, wash wall, walnut, walrus wastage/ɑː/ qualm (also /ɔː/), suave, swami /æ/ swam, aquatic (RP) /ʌ/ was (GA), what (GA)
after /w/ except before /k,ɡ,ŋ/ open syllables/eɪ/persuade, swathe/ɒ/ /ɔː/quality water
word-final/ɑː/bra, cha-cha, schwa, spa
unstressedin -⟨ace, age, ase, ate⟩ (except verbs)/ɪ,ə/palace, damage, forage, garbage, pirate, private/ɑː/ /ɪ/RP: garage, barrage chocolate, purchase, solace/eɪ/ rampage, primate
elsewhere/ə/about, an, salary, woman, blancmange, opera, via/ə/ to ∅ /eɪ/ /æ/ /ɑː/ (RP), /æ/ (GA)artistically, ordinary, necessary probate, folate, kinase anorak, rectangle, abscond contrast (n), flabbergast, reprimand/i/ karaoke, bologna (GA) /æ/ Assam /ʌ/ chaprassi
a_e/eɪ/gave, mate, flake/æ/have/ɛ/ ate (RP)
aa, ah/ɑː/baa, naan, blah/ə/Isaac, bar mitzvah/eɪ/ Quaalude
ae/iː/encyclopaedia, paediatrician, Caesar/ɛ/aesthetic/eɪ/ reggae, sundae, Gael /ə/ Michael, polkaed /aɪ/ maestro /aɪ.ɛ/ paella /æ/ Scottish Gaelic
aistressed/eɪ/daisy, laid, paisley, regain, waif/aɪ/ /ɛ/ /eɪ.ɪ/aisle, bonsai, daimon, krait said, again, against dais, laic, mosaic, papain/æ/ plaid, plaited, daiquiri /aɪˈiː/ naif, caique /i.ɪ/ archaism (RP)
unstressed/ɪ,ə/bargain, mountain, portrait/ə/certain, coxswain, spritsail
ao/aʊ/manoao, miaow, Maoism, cacao (GA)/eɪ/ /eɪ.ɒ/ /eɪ.ə/ /iˈoʊ/ /ɑːoʊ/gaol kaon, chaos kaolin karaoke baobab
au/ɔː/cause, fraud, haul, sauce, slaughter/ɒ/ /ɑː/ (RP), /æ/ (GA) /aʊ/ /oʊ/because (RP), sausage (RP), leprechaun (GA) aunt, draught, laughter degauss, graupel, trauma (GA) chauffeur, gauche, mauve/eɪ/ gauge /ʌ/ because (GA) /ə/ meerschaum ∅ restaurant
aw/ɔː/awed, flaw, hawk, tawny/aʊ/ Mawlid
ay/eɪ/bayonet, essays, grayer, hayride/aɪ/ /ɛ/aye, bayou, kayak, papaya mayor, prayer, says/iː/ cay, quay, parlay /əj/ gayal
ein closed syllables before multiple consonants final vowel in word/ɛ/petty, lethargy, trebleget, watershed/iː/axes (plural of axis), lethal, reflex, Stephen, feces, legally/ɪ/ pretty /ɒ/ ennui, entourage, genre /eɪ/ eh /ʌ/ feng shui
bef. 2+ unstressed syllables next syllable contains /ɪ//ɛ/legacy, elegant, delicate, metric, crevice, epic/iː/devious, premium, evil, scenic, strategic/ɪ/ English
in open syllables before single consonant before cons. + ⟨r⟩ + vowel final, only vowel in word before heterosyllabic vowel/iː/even, demon, fetal, recombine metre, secret, egret, secretion be, she museum, neon, theater (GA)/ɛ/ever, lemon, petal, recollect petrol, debris (RP), discretion/eɪ/ crepe, suede, ukulele /ɪ,ə/ repel, debris (some dialects)
/eɪ/seance, deity (some pronunciations)/ɛ/ yeah (GA)
unstressedword-finaldiscipline, recites, smile, limitrophe/iː/recipes, simile, apostrophe, deled/eɪ/ latte, mores, protege /ɛ/ zanze
before heterosyllabic vowel/i/create, area, atheism, video/eɪ/fideism, realpolitik
elsewhere/ɪ,ə/market, ticket, honest, college, boxes, perfect, express, believe/ə/taken, decency, moment/ɛ/ contest, alphabet, princess
eain closed syllables before multiple consonants/ɛ/dreamt, cleanse, wealth/iː/ /iə/feast, yeast realty, fealty/ɔː/ ealderman /æ/ poleax /eɪ.ɑː/ seance
in open syllables before single consonant before cons. + ⟨r⟩ + vowel final, only vowel in word before heterosyllabic vowel/iː/read (infinitive), leaf, zeal, dreams, cleans/ɛ/ /eɪ/ /ə/ /iːə,ɪər/ /ɪər/ /iːə/ /iː.eɪ/read (past simple), deaf, zealot break, great, eagre, yea hydrangea, likeable, ocean ideal, real, cereal idea urea, laureate creating, protease, reagent/ɑː/ orgeat /ɛə/ yeah (RP) /æ/ whereas /iːæ/ caveat /ɪ/ mileage /iː.ɪ/ lineage /iːæ/ beatify, reality /eɪˈɑː/ real
eau/oʊ/bureau, plateau, tableau/juː/beauty/ɒ/ bureaucracy /ə/ bureaucrat
ee/iː/bee, breech, feed, trainee/ɪ/ breeches, been (GA) /eɪ/ matinee, fiancees, nee /i/ bungee, coffee /iː.ə/ freest, weest /iː.ɛ/ reecho, /iː.ɪ/ reelect /ɛ/ threepence (also /ɪ/ or /ʌ/)
eh/eɪ/eh, prehnite, tempeh/ɛər/yeh/ɛ/ feh /ə/, keffiyeh
ei, eyusually/eɪ/veil, weight, heinous, obey/iː/ /aɪ/ /iː.ɪ/caffeine, seize, key, either geyser, height, heist, heinie, eye albeit, being, cysteine, deist/ɛ/ heifer, leisure, seigneur /æ/ reveille, serein /eɪ.ɪ/ fideist, /iˈaɪ/ deice
after ⟨c⟩/iː/deceive, ceiling, conceit/æ/ ceinture, enceinte /eɪ.ɪ/ glaceing, /iː.ɪ/ haecceity
unstressedword-final/i/ /iː/monkey, volley, curtsey, jersey/eɪ/ survey (n)
elsewhere/ɪ,ə/foreign, counterfeit, forfeit/ə/mullein, villein/ɪ/ ageist, herein, ogreish
eousually bisyllabic/iː.ɒ/ /iː.oʊ/ /iːə/eon, geology, reoffer, teleost creole, geode, leonine, video galleon, leotard, peon, theory/ɛ/ /iː/ /ə/feoffee, jeopardy, leopard feoff, people luncheon, pigeon, embraceor/oʊ/ yeoman, /ɛər/ ceorl /juː/ feodary, /uːi/ geoduck /eɪoʊ/ rodeo, teosinte /ɒ/ thereon /ʌ/ whereof /wʌ/ someone
eu, ew (ieu, iew)usually/juː/deuce, feudal, queue, dew, ewe, view/ɜː/ /iːə/berceuse, danseuse museum/oʊ/ sew ∅ fauteuil
after /r,ʃ,ʒ,dʒˌl/ after /t,d,n/ (GA)/uː/rheumatism, sleuth, jewel, blew, leukemia, lewd, lieu/iːə/nucleus, pileus/oʊ/ shew /ɛf/ lieutenant (RP)/jɜː/ milieu (RP) /iːˈjuː/ reuse /iː.ʌ/ reutters /ʌ/ pileup /ə/ whereupon /ɔɪ/ Freudian
iin closed syllables before multiple consonants final vowel in worded/ɪ/dissent, mislaid, slither kiss, sic, bit, inflict, hint, plinth/aɪ/dissect, island, indict, pint, ninth/æ/ meringue, timbre, absinthe (also /ɪ/) /iː/ artiste, chenille, skis, chic, ambergris
bef. 2+ unstressed syllables next syllable contains /ɪ/ before cons. + ⟨e, i⟩ + vowel/ɪ/litany, liberal, chivalry, misery finish, limit, minute (n) hideous, position, Sirius/aɪ/blithely, irony, libelous, rivalry, miserly, whitish, writing, shinier, tidied
in open syllables before single consonant before cons. + -⟨le⟩ or ⟨r⟩ + vowel before -⟨gh, gn⟩ word final before heterosyllabic vowel/aɪ/cited, dive, mica, rise, fire idle, trifle, nitrous, mitres sighed, signage alumni, alibi, radii vial, quiet, prior, pious/ɪ/city, give, vicar, risen triple, citrus, giblets pighead, signal
/iː/ski, macaroni, litres, in vitro, chignon, Monsignor clientele, fiat, lien, skiing
before -⟨nd, l⟩/aɪ/wilder, remind/ɪ/bewilder, rescind
unstressedbefore heterosyllabic vowel/j/onion, minion/aɪ/biology, diameter∅ parliament, lieu, nostalgia /i/ liaison, alien, radii, idiot
elsewhere/ɪ,ə/divide, permit (n), livid, typical/ə/giraffe, pencil, cousin, Cheshire∅ business /aɪ/ director, minute (adj) /aɪər/ sapphire
i_e/aɪ/polite, shine/iː//ɪ/police, elite, give
ieword-finally/aɪ/belie, die, untie, vie/i/goalie, oldie, auntie, movie/eɪ/ lingerie (GA), /ieɪ/ kyrie
elsewhere/iː/field, siege, rabies, skied/aɪ/ /aɪə/ /iə/ to /jə/ /iˈɛ/allied, pied, skies client, diet, science, sliest ambient, alien, oriel, ugliest orient (v), acquiesce/ɪ/ sieve, mischief, kerchief /ɛ/ friend, hygienic (GA) /aɪˈɛ/ biennial /aɪiː/ diene /iː.ɒ/ clientele /iˈiː/ medieval /iːə/ lien
oin closed syllables before multiple consonants final vowel in word/ɒ/doctor, bother, donkey dot, bomb, wonk, font/ʌ/ /oʊ/won, monkey, front gross, comb, wonted, both/uː/ tomb, womb /ʊ/ wolf /wʌ/ once /ɔː/ (GA) long, broth
bef. 2+ unstressed syllables next syllable contains /ɪ//ɒ/opera, colonise, botany topic, solid, promise/oʊ/brokenly, probity, diplomacy meiosis, aerobic
in open syllables before single consonant before cons. + -⟨le⟩ or ⟨r⟩ + vowel word-final before heterosyllabic vowel (inc. unstressed)/oʊ/omen, grove, total noble, cobra banjo, go boa, poet, stoic cooperate, proactive/ɒ/ /uː/ /ʌ/proper, gone, shone (RP) to, who, move, doable come, love, done, colander/ʊ/ woman, bosom /ɪ/ women /wʌ/ one ∅ colonel, chocolate
unstressed/ə/eloquent, wanton, purpose, Europe/ɒ/ neuron, proton /ɪ,ə/ hydrogen /u/ (GA) into
oa/oʊ/boat, coal, load, coaxing/oʊ.ə/ /oʊæ/ /oʊˈeɪ/boa, inchoate coaxial, ogdoad oasis, cloaca/ɔː/ broad /uːə/ doable /oʊˈɑː/ koala /wɑː/ quinoa
oeusually/iː/amoeba, coelacanth, foetal, phoenix/oʊ/ /uː/ /oʊˈɛ/doeskin, woeful shoelace, canoeing poetic, soever, orthoepic/ɛ/ foetid, roentgen /oʊˈiː/ coeval, noesis /oʊˈɜː/ coerce /oʊ.ə/ poetry, orthoepy
last vowel in word/oʊ/foe, goes, toed, woe/uː/ /oʊɛ/ /oʊ.ə/ /oʊ.ɪ,oʊ.ə/shoes, canoe coed, noel, phloem goer loess, poem/ʌ/ does /uːə/ doeth, doer /ɜː/ foehn /oʊiː/ diploe, kalanchoe
unstressed/ɪ/oedema, oesophagus/oʊ/aloe, echoed, oboes, soloed/uː/ hoopoe
oeu/uː/manoeuvre/ɜːr/ hors d'oeuvre
ohfinal or before a consonant/oʊ/oh, kohlrabi, ohm, pharaoh/ɒ/John, johnny/ɔː/ bohrium /ə/ matzoh
oi/ɔɪ/boing, moist, coin, envoi/oʊɪ/ /wɑː/ /ə/going, egoist, heroin, stoic bourgeois, coiffeur, patois connoisseur, porpoise, tortoise/uːɪ/ doing /wæ/ croissant (RP) /i/ chamois /oʊaɪ/ ghettoise, oroide
oousually/uː/cool, sooth, boot, goosebumps/ʊ/wool, soot, foot, gooseberry/oʊ/ brooch /oʊ.ɒ/ coopt, zoology, /oʊ.ə/ oocyte (RP)
before ⟨k, d⟩/ʊ/cook, shook, wood, stood/uː/kook, spook, food, brood/ʌ/ flood, blood
oubefore single consonant before cons. + -⟨le⟩ or ⟨r⟩ + vowel before -⟨nd, ld, gh, gn⟩ word final before heterosyllabic vowel/aʊ/out, aloud, bough/uː/ /ʌ/ /oʊ/soup, you, through touch soul, dough/juː/ (GA): ampoule, coupon
before multiple consonants final vowel in word bef. 2+ unstressed syllables next syllable contains /ɪ/ before cons. + ⟨e, i⟩ + vowel/ʊ/could, should/ʌ/ /oʊ/trouble, country boulder/ɒ/ cough, fount (printing)
unstressed/ə/camouflage, labour, nervous/ʊ/ /ʊər/bivouac, bedouin, potpourri detour, fourchette/ʌ/ hiccough /w/ ratatouille, ouabaine
owstressed/aʊ/owl, bow, row, sow, allow/oʊ/own, bow, row, sow, alow/ɒ/ acknowledge /ɒ/ or /ʌ/ rowlock
unstressed/oʊ/yellow, teabowl, landowner/aʊ/peafowl, sundowner/əw/ cassowary, toward (RP)
oy/ɔɪ/boy, doyenne, foyer, voyage/waɪ/voyeur, noyade/oʊj/ oyez /aɪ/ coyote (GA) /i/ buoy (GA)
uin closed syllables before multiple consonants final vowel in word/ʌ/budding, cuckold, mullet but, gull, fuss/ʊ/pudding, cuckoo, bullet, put, full, puss/uː/ ruthless, brut /juː/ butte, debut, fuchsia, tulle
in open syllables before single consonant before cons. + -⟨le⟩ or ⟨r⟩ + vowel before heterosyllabic vowel word-final/juː/mute, student, puny, union, fuses bugle, hubris, nutrient (RP) duo, nuance, pursuant, ensuing menu, emu, impromptu (RP)/ʌ/ /uː/study, punish, bunion, buses butler, cutlery, subrogate super, lunar, absolute, revolution suet, lucrative, lugubrious hindu, tutu, tofu, truth/ɪ/ busy, business
in open syllables after /r,ʃ,ʒ,j/, or cons. + /l/ before single consonant before cons. + -⟨le⟩ or ⟨r⟩ + vowel before heterosyllabic vowel word-final/uː/rule, chute, June, recluses scruples, rubric truant, fluent, cruelty flu, guru/juː/overuse, underused/ʌ/ runaway, truculent, clubroom /ʊ/ sugar
after ⟨g⟩before ⟨e, i, y⟩guest, guide, vaguer/w/segue, distinguish/juː/ ambiguity
before ⟨a, o⟩/w/languageguard, languor/juː/ jaguar (RP)
after ⟨q⟩/w/quail, conquest, banquet, quitequay, conquer, bouquet, mosquito
unstressed/ə/support, industry, useful, medium/juː/ /ʌ/debut guffaw, unruly, upend, vulgarity/ɪ,ə/ minute, lettuce
ueafter ⟨g⟩word finalleague, tongue/juː/ague/eɪ/ merengue, /i/ dengue
word medial/ɛ/ /ə/guest, guessed, baguette guerrilla, beleaguered∅ /juː/vaguely, intrigued argued/weɪ/ segued, /wɛ/ guenon /wə/ unguent, /wiː/ ungues /juːə/ arguer /iː/ Portuguese
after ⟨r⟩, or cons. + ⟨l⟩/uː/true, clue, gruesome, blues/uːə/influence, cruel, fluent, bluest/uː.ɪ/ cruet, /uːɛ/ influential
elsewhere (except after ⟨q⟩)/juː/virtue, cue, valued, hue, muesli/juːə/ /juːɛ/ /uː/ /uːə/fuel, constituent, rescuer innuendo, statuesque, minuet Sue, snafued (GA: due, revenue) GA: duel, pursuer/uː.ɪ/ suet, /uːɛ/ muezz|in /juːiː/ tenues, /juːeɪ/ habitue /jʊər/ puerile, /ʊ/ muenster /weɪ/ suede, Venezuelan /wɛ/ pueblo, /wɪ/ desuetude
uiafter ⟨g⟩/ɪ/ /aɪ/guild, guitar, intriguing, roguish guide, guise, beguile/wɪ/anguish, penguin, linguist, sanguine/iː/ beguine, /wiː/ linguine /juːɪ/ arguing, aguish, contiguity
after ⟨j, r⟩ or cons. + ⟨l⟩/uː/juice, cruise, sluice, fruiting/uːɪ/fruition, fluid, ruin, druid, truism, incongruity/uː.j/ alleluia /ʊ/ Cruickshank
elsewhere (except after ⟨q⟩)/juːɪ/ /ɪ/conduit, cuing, genuine, Buick, circuitous, Jesuit build, circuit, biscuit, pursuivant/uː/ /juːə/ /juː/ /uːɪ/suit, suitable, nuisance (GA) intuitive (RP), promiscuity nuisance (RP), puisne suicide, tui, Inuit, Hinduism/aɪ/ duiker, /ə/ circuitry /wɪ/ cuisine, suint /wiː/ suite, ennui, tuille /uːaɪ/ sui generis /weɪ/ feng shui
uu/ju.ə/continuum, residuum/u.ə/menstruum/(j)uːʌ/ duumvir /juː/ vacuum /uː/ muumuu /wʊ/ squush
uy/aɪ/buy, buyout, guyed/iː/ /wi/guyot, cliquy, plaguy obsequy, soliloquy/jʊɪ/ toluyl /uːj/ thuya, gruyere /wiː/ puy /wiːj/ tuyere
w/uː/cwm/oʊ/ pwn
ybefore multiple consonants bef. 2+ unstressed syllables next syllable contains /ɪ//ɪ/myth, cryptic, system, symbol cylinder, typical, pyramid, dynasty cynic, lyric, lytic, syringe, yttrium/aɪ/cyclone, hyphen, psyche, python hydrogen, dynasty (GA) cyclist, hybrid, psychic, typist
before single consonant before cons. + -⟨le⟩ or ⟨r⟩ + vowel word-final/aɪ/typing, style, paralyze, nylon cycle, cypress, hydrate, lycra awry, by, deny, sky, supply/ɪ/byzantine, synod, synagogue, Cypriote, sycophantic
unstressedword-final/i/any, city, happy, only, supply (adv)/aɪ/ ally (n)
elsewhere/ɪ/bicycle, oxygen, polymer, dyslexia, physique, synonymous/ə/ /aɪ/ /i/sibyl, pyjamas dynamics, hypothesis, typhoon anyway, everything

Combinations of vowel letters and ⟨r⟩

SpellingMajor value (IPA)Examples of major valueMinor values (IPA)Examples of minor valueExceptions
arbefore a vowelnext syllable contains /ɪ,ə/ within the same morpheme/ær/apparent, arid, guarantee, mariners, parish/ɛər/parent, garish
followed by a morpheme boundary/ɛər/carer, scary, sharing, rarity/ær/ /ɑːr/comparable, comparative faraway, tsarist
otherwise/ɛər/area, care, pharaoh, vary, wariness/ɑːr/aria, are, safaris/ɒr/ quarantine, waratah
elsewherestressed/ɑːr/argyle, car, farce/ɛər/ scarce /ær/ sarsaparilla (GA) /ɜːr/ dharna
after /w//ɔːr/war, award, dwarf, warning, quarter
unstressed/ər/circular, pillar
aer/ɛər/aerial, aeroplane/ɪər/chimaera/ər/ anaerobe
air/ɛər/cairn, millionaire, dairy/aɪər/ hetaira /aɪˈɪər/ zaire
aor/eɪˈɔːr/aorta/aʊ.r/ /ɔːr/Maori extraordinary
arrbefore a spoken vowel/ær/marry, barrel, arrow, barren, carrot/ɑːr/starry, barring
elsewhere/ɑːr/scarred, Parr
aur/ɔːr/dinosaur, aural, aura, Laura/ɒr/laurel, Laurence
awer/ɔː.ər/gnawer, rawer, thawer/ɔːr/ drawer
ayer, ayor/eɪ.ər/layer, mayor, soothsayer
erbefore a vowel/ɪər/here, series, query, merely/ɛər/ /ɛr/ /iːˈr/compere, there, werewolf derelict, heresy, perish, very derail, reremind/ɜːr/ were, weregild
elsewherestressed/ɜːr/her, jerk, coerced, merchant/ɛər/berceuse/ɑːr/ clerk, sergeant
unstressed/ər/starter, fewer, Berber, arguer, shower/eɪ/ (or /ər/)dossier, foyer
earbefore a consonantbefore a morpheme boundary/ɪər/dearly, fearless, tearful, yearling/ɛər/bearskin, swearword/ɜːr/ heard
elsewhere/ɜːr/pearly, hearse, yearning, earth/ɑːr/hearken, hearty, hearth/ɪər/ beard, peart /eɪ.ər/ bearnaise /iˈɑːr/ rearm
elsewhere/ɪər/fear, year, appear, hearing,/ɛər/ /iː.ər/pear, bearish, wearing linear, nuclear, stearin/iːˈr/ tearoom
eer/ɪər/cheering, beer, eerie/iːər/freer, seers
eir/ɛər/heir, madeira, their/ɪər/weird, weir, eyrie/aɪər/ oneiric, eirenic
eor/iɔːr/deorbit, reorganise/ɪər/theory
errbefore a spoken vowel/ɛr/error, merry, terrible, herring, ferret/ɜːr/referring
elsewhere/ɜːr/err, preferred
eurafter /r,ʃ,ʒ,j/, cons. + /l//ʊər/pleurisy
elsewhere/jʊər/euro, liqueur, neural/ɜːr/masseur, voyeur/iː.ɜːr/ theurgy
irbefore a spoken vowelusually/aɪər/pirate, virus, iris, spiral/ɪr/mirage, virile, iridescent, spirit
derived from a word with silent ⟨e⟩ following/aɪər/wirable, aspiring
before silent ⟨e⟩/aɪər/hire, fires, mired
elsewherestressed/ɜːr/bird, fir/ɪər/ menhir
unstressed/ər/elixir, kefir, triumvir
ier/ɪər/cashier, fierce, frontier, pier/aɪər/ /iər/shier, fiery, hierarchy, plier busier, rapier, glacier, hosiery/i.ɛər/ concierge, premiere /ieɪ/ atelier, bustier, dossier /iːər/ skier
irrbefore a spoken vowel/ɪr/mirror, squirrel, cirrus, tirret/ɜːr/stirrer
elsewhere/ɜːr/whirred
orafter ⟨w⟩/ɜːr/word, work, worst/ɔːr/worn, sword, swore
elsewherestressed/ɔːr/ford, boring, more/ɒr/forest, moral/ɜːr/ whorl /ʌr/ borough ∅ comfortable
unstressed/ər/gladiator, major, equator
oar/ɔːr/boar, coarse, keyboard, soaring/ər/ cupboard, starboard /oʊˈɑːr/ coarctate
oer/oʊ.ər/partygoer, forgoer/uː.ər/undoer, canoer/ɜːr/ oersted
oir/wɑːr/reservoir, memoir, moire, soiree/ɔɪər/coir, loir, Moira/waɪər/ choir /ər/ avoirdupois
oor/ʊər/poor, moor, boorish, roorback/ɔːr/door, flooring/ər/ whippoorwill /oʊˈɔːr/ coordinate
orrstressedafter ⟨w⟩/ʌr/worry
elsewhere/ɒr/horrid, porridge, torrent, correlate/ɒr/ (RP), /ɑːr/ (GA)borrow, sorry/ɔːr/ Andorra
unstressed/ər/correct, corrupt, haemorrhage, horrific
ourstressed/ɔːr/four, courtesan, discourse/aʊər/ /ɜːr/ /ʊər/hour, flour, scours journey, courtesy, scourge tour, courier, gourd, velour/ʌr/ courage, flourish
unstressed/ər/labour, colourful/ʊr/ /ʊər/entourage, potpourri detour, fourchette
urbefore a vowelelsewhere/jʊər/lure, purity, curing/ʊər/allure, guru, Silurian/ɛr/ bury, burial
after /r,ʃ,ʒ,j/, cons. + /l//ʊər/rural, jury, plural, sure, assurance, allure
elsewherestressed/ɜːr/turn, occur, curdle/ʌr//ʊər/ langur
unstressed/ər/sulphur, jodhpur, bulgur, murmur
urrbefore a spoken vowel/ʌr/current, hurry, flurry, burrow, turret/ɜːr/furry, blurring
elsewhere/ɜːr/burr, blurred
yr
before a spoken vowelbef. 2+ unstressed syllables next syllable contains /ɪ//ɪr/syrup, Pyrenees, lyric, pyramid, Syria, myriad, syringe, tyranny, pyrrhic
elsewhere/aɪər/tyrant, gyrate, pyrotechnic, thyroid
before silent ⟨e⟩/aɪər/lyre, pyre, tyres, gyred
elsewherestressed/ɜːr/myrtle, myrrh
unstressed/ər/martyr

Combinations of other consonant and vowel letters

SpellingMajor value (IPA)Examples of major valueMinor values (IPA)Examples of minor valueExceptions
alExcluding before ⟨f, k, l, m, t⟩ (see below)/æl/pal, talcum, algae, alp/ɔːl/bald, Nepal, always, walrus/ɔː/ falcon (also with /ɔːl/, /ɒl/ or /æl/) /ɒl/ false (RP; also /ɔːl/)
alfbefore a vowel/ælf/alfalfa, malfeasance
elsewhere/ɑːf/ (RP) /æf/ (GA)calf, half/ɔːlf/ palfrey /eɪ/ halfpenny
alkmorpheme-final/ɔːk/stalk, walking, talkative, chalkboard
elsewhere/ælk/alkaline, grimalkin, valkyrie/ɔːlk,ɒlk/balkanise
allmorpheme-final/ɔːl/call, fallout, smaller/æl/shall, pall-mall (RP)/ɛl/ pall-mall (GA)
elsewhere/æl/alley, callus, shallow/ɒl/ /əl/wallet, swallow allow, dialled/ɛl/ marshmallow (GA)
almmorpheme-final/ɑː(l)m/alms, palm, calmer, embalming/ɔːm/ halm
elsewhere/ælm/palmate, salmonella, talmud/ɔːlm/almanac, almost , instalment/æm/ salmon /ɑːlm/ almond (GA) /əlm/ signalment /ɑːm/ almond (RP), balmy, palmistry.
alt/ɔːlt,ɒlt/alter, malt, salty, basalt/ælt/alto, shalt, saltation, asphalt (RP)/ɑːlt/ gestalt (GA) /əlt/ royalty, penalty
angeword final/eɪndʒ/arrange, change, mange, strange/ændʒ/flange, phalange/ɑːnʒ/ melange /ɒndʒ/ blancmange /ɪndʒ/ orange
asteword final/eɪst/chaste, lambaste, paste, taste/æst/cineaste, caste (GA), pleonaste/ɑːst/ (out)caste (RP) /əsteɪ/ namaste
-ciunstressed before vowel/ʃ/special, gracious/si/ (also /ʃ/)species
-cqu/kw/acquaint, acquire/k/lacquer, racquet
edword final after /t/ or /d//ɪd,əd/loaded, waited
word final after a voiceless sound/t/piped, enserfed, snaked/ɛd/biped, underfed/ɪd,əd/ naked
word final after a lenis sound/d/limbed, enisled, unfeared/ɛd/imbed, misled, infrared/ɪd,əd/ beloved
esword final after a fricative/ɪz,əz/mazes, washes, axes, bases, pieces/iːz/axes, bases, feces, oases
ex-unstressed before ⟨h⟩ or a vowel/ɪɡz,əɡz/exist, examine, exhaust/ɛks/exhale
gu-before ⟨a⟩/ɡw/bilingual, guano, language/ɡ/guard, guarantee
(a)isleword final/aɪl/aisle, isle, enisle, lisle
leword final after non ⟨r⟩ cons./əl/little, table/l/orle, isle/leɪ/ boucle
ngueword final/ŋ/tongue, harangue, meringue/ŋɡeɪ/merengue, distingué/ŋɡi/ dengue
old/oʊld/blindfold, older, bold/əld/ /ɒld/scaffold, kobold (also /ɒld/) doldrums, solder (RP)
olk/oʊk/yolk, folklore/ɒlk/polka (RP), kolkhoz/oʊlk/ polka (GA)
oll/ɒl/dollhouse, pollen, trolley, holly/oʊl/tollhouse, swollen, troller, wholly/ɔː/ atoll (GA) /ɔɪ/ cholla /əl/ caroller, collide
olm/ɒlm/olm, dolmen/oʊlm/enrolment, holmium/oʊm/ holm (oak)
ongmorpheme-final/ɒŋ/ (RP) /ɔːŋ/ (GA)songstress, along, strong, wronger/ɒŋ/tonger, bong, dugong, tongs/ʌŋ/ among
elsewhere/ɒŋɡ/congress, jongleur, bongo, conger, ongoing, nongraded/ɒndʒ/ /ʌŋɡ/ /ʌndʒ/congeries, longevity, pongee monger, humongous, mongrel sponger, longe, spongy/ʌŋ/ tongue /ənɡ/ congratulate, lemongrass /əndʒ/ congeal, congestion /ɒnʒ/ allonge /oʊnʒ/ congé (GA)
ought/ɔːt/bought, brought, fought, nought, ought, sought, thought, wrought/aʊt/doughty, drought
qu-/kw/queen, quick/k/liquor, mosquito
queword final/k/mosque, bisque/keɪ/manque, risqué/kjuː/ barbeque /ki/ pulque
reword final after non ⟨r⟩ cons./ər/timbre, acre, ogre, centre/reɪ/, /ri/ /rə/cadre (GA), compadre, emigre genre, oeuvre, fiacre
ronword final after vowel/rɒn/neuron, moron, interferon, aileron/rən/baron, heron, environ/ərn/ iron /roʊn/ chaperon
sci-unstressed before a vowel/ʃ/conscience, luscious, prosciutto/saɪ/sciatica, sciamachy, sciential/ʃi/ conscientious, fasciated /sɪ/ (RP) omniscient, prescience
scleword final/səl/corpuscle, muscle/skəl/mascle
-seword final after vowel (noun)/s/house, excuse, moose, anise, geese/z/prose, nose, tease, guise, compromise/zeɪ/ marchese
word final after vowel (verb)/z/house, excuse, choose, arise, please/s/grouse, dose, lease, chase, promise
-siunstressed after a vowel/ʒ/vision, occasion, explosion, illusion/zi/easier, enthusiasm, physiological
unstressed after a cons./ʃ/pension, controversial, compulsion/si/ tarsier, Celsius
-ssiunstressed before a vowel/ʃ/mission, passion, Russia, session/si/potassium, dossier, messier
-stiunstressed before a vowel/stʃ/question, Christian, suggestion
-sureunstressed after a vowel/ʒər/leisure, treasure
unstressed after a cons./ʃər/tonsure, censure
-theunstressed/ð/scathe, spathe
-tiunstressed before a vowel/ʃ/cautious, patient, inertia, initial, ration/ti/ /ʃi/patios, consortia, fiftieth, courtier ratios, minutia, initiate, negotiate/taɪ/ cation, cationic /ʒ/ equation /tj/ rentier (GA)
-tureunstressed/tʃər/nature, picture
-zureunstressed/ʒər/seizure, azure

Sound-to-spelling correspondences

The following table shows for each sound the various spelling patterns used to denote it, starting with the prototypical pattern(s) followed by others in alphabetical order. Some of these patterns are very rare or unique (such as ⟨gh⟩ for /p/, ⟨ph⟩ for /v/, ⟨i⟩ for /ɑː/). An ellipsis (⟨…⟩) stands for an intervening consonant.

Consonants

Arranged in the order of the IPA consonant tables.

Common Graphemes

PhonemeSpellingUsageExample Words
/m/mMost of the timemine, jam
mmdouble consonant rulehammer
mbEnd of a few wordsthumb
/n/nMost of the timenice, pin
nndouble consonant rulewinning
knStart of some words of Germanic originknee
gnStart and end of a few wordsgnome, sign
/ŋ/ngMost of the timesing
nright before a /k/ spellinglink
/p/pMost of the timepond, hip
ppdouble consonant ruleclapping
/b/bMost of the timeblue, cab
bbdouble consonant rulerubbing
/t/tMost of the timeten, lit
ttdouble consonant ruleknitter
/d/dMost of the timedin, pad
dddouble consonant rulehidden
/k/kword or syllable-initial: right before ⟨e, i, y⟩ root or word-final: after a consonant, vowel team or within a VCe spellingkid, Ken, sky, milk, book, make
cright before ⟨a, o, u⟩ or a consonantcat, cob, cut, clap
ckroot or word-final: right after a short vowelpick, lacking
ccin the middle of words before ⟨a, o, u⟩hiccup, raccoon
chusually in words of Greek originchemistry, stomach
xright before 'c' /s/excite
queend of wordsboutique
/g/gmost casesgoat, tag
ggdouble consonant rulesbegging
/f/fmost casesfly, leaf
ffdouble consonant rulehuff, bluffing
phAncient greek wordsphone, graph
/v/vmost casesvine
veend of words when not right before a long VCe spellinggive, sleeve, twelve
/θ/thMost of the timethin, bath
/ð/thMost of the timethem, feather
/s/soften at the beginning, or right after an unvoiced consonant or short vowelslime, cups, disk
ssdouble consonant rulehiss
cright before ⟨e, i, y⟩cent, city, cymbal
seend of a word or root right after a vowel teamhorse
ceend of word or root right after a short vowel and consonantdance
scbeginning of some wordsscissors
stwithin the syllables /sən/ or /səl/listen, whistle
/z/zword-initialzoo
sright after a voiced consonant or non-short or r-colored vowelcans, bees
zzdouble consonant rulejazz, buzzy
zeend of words when not right before a long VCe spellingsneeze
seend of words right after a vowel teampause
xbeginning of a few wordsxylophone
/ʃ/shmost of the timeship, fish
tiin words of Latin originattention, ratio
ciin words of Latin originspecial, delicious
/ʒ/susually before -uretreasure, leisure
siusually before -onvision, explosion
/h/hmost of the timehelmet
/r/rmost of the timeroad
wrword-initialwreck
rhrhino
/l/lmost of the timelamp
lldouble consonant rulewell
/j/ymost of the timeyes
iglide before a unstressed vowel or vowel team in a syllableonion
/w/wmost of the timewater
//chmost of the timechop, each
tchafter a short vowelcatch, itch
//jmostly before ⟨a, o, u⟩jam, joy, jug
gbefore ⟨e, i, y⟩ between a silent ⟨e⟩ spelling from ⟨ge⟩ where the ⟨e⟩ is dropped before adding a suffixgem, giraffe, energy cage, huge changing
geword-final after a non-short vowellarge
dgeword-final after a short vowelbridge
dgfrom ⟨dge⟩ where the ⟨e⟩ is dropped before adding a suffixjudging
/ks/xword-finalsix
Most other /ks/ spellings are clusters of a /k/ and /s/ spelling. See § Rarer graphemes.
/kw/quMost of the timequeen
/gz/xafter a vowel and right before a short vowelexam

Rarer graphemes

Consonants
IPASpellingExamples
/m/chm, gm, lm, mbe, me, mh, mme, mn, mp, smedrachm, phlegm, salmon, combe, forme, mho, femme, autumn, assumption, disme
/n/n, nn, cn, dn, gn, gne, kn, mn, mp, nd, ne, ng, nh, nne, nt, pn, sn, snecnidarian, Wednesday, coigne, mnemonic, comptroller, handsome, borne, ngaio, piranha, tonne, topgallant-sail, pneumonia, puisne, mesne
/ŋ/nc, nd, ngh, ngue, nhcharabanc, handkerchief, sangh, tongue, sinh
/p/gh, pe, (ph), ppehiccough, thorpe, diphthong (RP), steppe
/b/be, bh, pb, gbbarbe, bhang, cupboard, Igbo
/t/bt, cht, ct, d, dt, ed, ght, kt, pt, phth, st, te, th, ttedoubt, yacht, victual, iced, veldt, dressed, lighter, ktypeite, ptarmigan, phthisical, cestui, forte, thyme, cigarette
/d/ddh, bd, de, dh, ed, ldBuddhism, bdellium, horde, dharma, abandoned, solder,
/k/cch, ch, cq, cqu, cque, cu, ke, kh, kk, lk, q, qh, qu, (g)zucchini, chord, tack, acquire, lacquer, sacque, biscuit, burke, khaki, trekker, polka-dotted, quorum, fiqh, liquor, (strength)
/ɡ/ckg, gge, gh, gu, guegig, egg, blackguard, pogge, ghost, guard, catalogue
/f/fe, ffe, ft, gh, lf, phe, pph, (u)carafe, gaffe, soften, laugh, half, ouphe, sapphire, lieutenant (RP)
/v/vv, f, lve, ph, u, w, zv, b, bhsavvy, of, halve, Stephen, quetsch, weltanschauung, rendezvous, Habdalah, kethibh
/θ/the, chth, phth, tth, h, tabsinthe, chthonic, apophthegm, eighth, tanh
/ð/the, dd, dh, ybreathe, gorsedd, edh, ye (mock archaic)
/s/cc, ce, ps, sce, sch, sh, sse, sses, (sth), sw, t, th, ti, (ts), tsw, tzs, tz, (z)song, mess, city, flaccid, ounce, psalm, coalesce, schism (RP), horse, dishonest, finesse, chausses, asthma (RP), sword, tzitzit, zizith, Kiribati, tsunami (GA), boatswain, britzska, waltz (RP), quartz
/z/cz, (sc), se, sh, sp, ss, (sth), ts, tz, zh, zs (one pronunciation), c (some dialects)czar, crescent (RP), tease, déshabillé, raspberry, dissolve, asthma (GA), tsarina, tzar, zho, (vizsla), (electricity)
/ʃ/sh, c, ce, ch, che, chi, chsi, ci, s, sc, sch, sche, schsch, sci, sesh, she, shh, shi, si, sj, ss, ssi, ti, psh, zh, xshin, speciality, ocean, machine, quiche, marchioness, fuchsia, special, sugar, crescendo, schmooze, schottische, eschscholtzia, conscience, tortoiseshell, galoshe, shh, cushion, expansion, sjambok, tissue, mission, nation, pshaw, pirozhki, paxiuba
/ʒ/(ci), g, ge, j, s, si, ssi, ti, z, zh, zhe, (zi), zs (one pronunciation)coercion (GA), genre, beige, bijou, leisure, division, abscission, equation, seizure, muzhik, uzhe, brazier (GA), (vizsla)
/x/ch (in Scottish English), gh (in Irish English)loch, lough
/h/wh, j, chwho, fajita, chutzpah
/r/r, rh, wrrun, rhyme, wrong
/l/lh, lle, gl, sle, ln (some dialects)pelham, gazelle, imbroglio, aisle, (kiln)
/j/y, h, i, j, l, ll, z, r (one pronunciation)vinho verde, onion, hallelujah, llano, tortilla, capercailzie, February
/hw/wh (in some dialects)which
/w/u, h, ou, ju, wh (in most dialects)persuade, choir, ouija, marijuana, what
/ts/ts, tz, zz, znuts, quartz, pizza, Nazi
/dz/ds, dz, zpads, podzol, jiaozi
//c, cc, cch, (che), chi, cs, cz, q, t, tche, te, (th), (ti), ts, tsch, tz, tzs, tzsch, hcello, bocce, kaccha, niche (GA), falchion, csardas, Czech, qi, nature, escutcheon, righteous, posthumous (GA), bastion (GA), britska (US), putsch, britz(s)ka (US), Nietzschean, sinh
//(ch), d, di, dj, dzh, gg, gi, jj, t, zhsandwich (RP), graduate, soldier, adjust, Tadzhik, veggies, Belgian, hajj, congratulate (US), guzheng
/ks/xx, cast, cc, chs, cks, cques, cs, cz, kes, ks, lks, ques, xc, xe, xs, xsc, xswdoxxing, forecastle, accent, tachs, backs, sacques, sacs, eczema, burkes, yaks, caulks, toques, excel, axe, exsert, exscind, coxswain
/gz/x, ggs, gs, xhexam, eggs, bags, exhilarate

Vowels

Nasal vowels used by some speakers in words of French origin such as enceinte (/ɒ̃ˈsæ̃t/), are not included.

IPAVowel TypeSpellingUsageExample Word
/æ/ShortaMost of the timealligator
/ɛ/ShorteMost of the timeelf
eaSometimes when right before 'd'bread

Rarer Spellings

Vowels
IPASpellingExamples
/æ/a...e, (ag), ai, al, (ar), (au), ea, ei, i, o (one pronunciation)have, seraglio (GA), plaid, salmon, sarsaparilla (GA), laugh (GA), poleax enceinte, meringue, (chometz)
/ɑː/a, a...e, aa, aae, aah, aahe, (ag), ah, (au), (i), o (one pronunciation), ar (one pronunciation)father, garage, salaam, baaed, aah, aahed, seraglio (RP), blah, aunt (RP), lingerie (GA), (chometz), (schoolmarm)
/aɪ/i...e, ae, ai, aie, (aille), ais, ay, aye, ei, eigh, eu, ey, eye, i, ia, ic, ie, ig, igh, ighe, is, oi, (oy), ui, uy, uye, y, y...e, yefine, maestro, krait, shanghaied, canaille (RP), aisle, kayak, aye, heist, height, deuddarn, heyduck, eye, mic, diaper, indict, tie, sign, high, sighed, isle, choir, coyote (GA), guide, buy, guyed, why, type, bye
/aʊ/ou, ow, ao, aou, aow, aowe, au, odh, ough, oughe, owe, iao, iauout, now, manoao, caoutchouc, miaow, miaowed, gauss, bodhrán, bough, ploughed, vowed, jiao, chiaus
/ɛ/e, a, ae, ai, ay, e...e, ea, eh, ei, eo, ie, oe, ue, ee (one pronunciation)met, many, aesthetic, said, says, there, deaf, feh, heifer, jeopardy, friend, foetid, guess, (threepence)
/eɪ/a, a...e, aa, ae, ai, ai...e, aig, aigh, ais,, alf, ao, au, ay, aye, e (é), e...e, ea, eg, ee (ée), eh, ei, ei...e, eig, eigh, eighe, er, ere, es, et, ete, ey, eye, ez, (ie), (oeh), ue, uetbass, rate, quaalude, reggae, rain, cocaine, arraign, straight, palais, halfpenny, gaol, gauge, hay, played, ukulele (café), crepe, steak, matinee (soirée), thegn, eh, veil, beige, reign, eight, weighed, dossier, espaliered, demesne, ballet, crocheted, they, obeyed, chez, lingerie (GA), boehmite (GA), merengue, bouquet
/ə/a, e, i, o, u, y, a...e, ae, ah, ai, anc, ath, au, ea, eau, eh, ei, eig, eo, eou, (eu), gh, ia, ie, io, iou, o...e, oa, oe, oh, oi, oo, op, ou, (ough), (u...e), ua, ue, (ui), uo, wa...etuna, oven, pencil, pilot, opus, beryl, carcase, Messiah, mountain, blancmange, tuath, sergeant, bureaucrat, keffiyeh, mullein, foreign, truncheon, timeous, amateur (RP), burgh, spatial, deficient, legion, conscious, awesome, starboard, biocoenosis, matzoh, porpoise, whipoorwill, topgallant, callous, borough (RP), minute (GA), piquant, guerilla, circuit (GA), languor, gunwale
/ɪ/i, y, a, a...e, ai, e, ea, ee, ei, i...e, ia, ie, ii, o, oe, u, u...e, uibit, myth, orange, chocolate, bargain, pretty, mileage, breeches, counterfeit, medicine, carriage, sieve, shiitake, women, oedema, busy, minute, build
/iː/e, e...e, i, i...e, a, ae, aoi, ay, ea, ee, e'e, ei, eo, ey, eye, ie, ie...e, is, ix, oe, oi, ue, ui, uy, ybe, cede, ski, machine, bologna, algae, Taoiseach, quay, beach, bee, e'en, deceit, people, key, keyed, field, hygiene, debris, prix, amoeba, chamois, dengue, beguine, guyot, ynambu
/ɒ/a, o, ach, au, eau, oh, (ou), ow, e, (eo)watch, lock, yacht, sausage, bureaucracy, cough (RP), acknowledge, entrée, cheongsam (RP)
/ɔː/a, al, au, au...e, augh, aughe, aw, awe, ea, (o), oa, oss, (ou), oughbald, talk, author, cause, caught, overslaughed, jaw, awe, ealdorman, broad, crossjack, cough, bought
/ɔɪ/oi, oy, eu, oll, ooi, oye, ui, (uoy), uoye, (awy)avoid, toy, lawyer, Freudian, cholla, rooibos, enjoyed, schuit, buoyant, buoyed (RP), (lawyer)
/oʊ/o, o...e, aoh, au, aux, eau, eaue, eo, ew, oa, oe, oh, oo, ore, ot, ou, ough, oughe, ow, owe, wso, bone, pharaoh, mauve, faux, beau, plateaued, yeoman, sew, boat, foe, oh, brooch, forecastle, depot, soul, though, furloughed, know, owe, pwn
/ʌ/u, o, o...e, oe, oo, ou, uddi, wo, a, au (some dialects), ee (one pronunciation)sun, son, come, does, flood, touch, studdingsail, twopence, sati, (because), (threepence)
/ʊ/oo, u, o, o...e, (or), oul, wfoot, full, wolf, pembroke, worsted (RP), should, cwtch
/uː/u, u...e, oo, oo...e, eew, eu, ew, ieu, ioux, o, o...e, oe, oeu, ooe, ou, ough, ougha, oup, ue, uh, ui, (uo), w, wotutu, flute, too, groove, leeward, sleuth, yew, lieu, Sioux, to, lose, shoe, manoeuvre, cooed, soup, through, brougham, coup, true, buhl, fruit, buoy (GA), cwm, two
/juː/u, u...e, ew, eau, eo, eu, ewe, ieu, iew, (ou), ue, ueue, ui, ut, uu, youmusic, use, few, beauty, feodary, feud, ewe, adieu, view, ampoule (GA), cue, queue, nuisance, debut, vacuum, you

Vowels followed by ⟨r⟩

Nasal vowels used by some speakers in words of French origin such as enceinte (/ɒ̃ˈsæ̃t/), are not included.

Vowels
IPASpellingExamples
/ær/ar, arr, ahr, uararid, marry, Fahrenheit, guarantee
/ɑːr/ar, aar, ahr, alla, are, arr, arre, arrh, ear, er, uar, our (some dialects)car, bazaar, tahr, topgallant-sail, are, parr, bizarre, catarrh, heart, sergeant, guard, (our)
/aɪər/ire, ier, igher, yer, yre, oir, uyerfire, crier, higher, flyer, pyre, choir, buyer
/aʊər/our, owersour, tower
/ɛr/er, err, urvery, merry, bury
/ɛər/are, aer, air, aire, ar, ayer, ayor, ayre, e'er, eah, ear, eir, eor, er, ere, err, erre, ert, ey're, eyrbare, aerial, tahr, hair, millionaire, scarce, prayer, mayor, fayre, ne'er, yeah, bear, heir, ceorl, moderne, where, err (GA), parterre, couvert, they're, eyra
/ər/ar, er, ir, or, aur, aerhangar, letter, elixir, author, aurora, anaerobe
/ɜːr/er, ir, ur, ar, ear, ere, err, erre, eur, eure, irr, irre, oeu, olo, or, our, ueur, uhr, urr, urre, yr, yrrhdefer, fir, fur, dharna, earl, were, err, interred, voyeur, chauffeured (GA), birr, stirred, hors d'oeuvre, colonel, worst, adjourn, liqueur, buhrstone, purr, murre, myrtle, myrrh
/ɪr/ir, irr, yr, yrrh, erspirit, mirror, tyranny, pyrrhic, erase
/ɪər/ere, aer, e're, ear, eare, eer, eere, ehr, eir, eor, er, ers, eyr, ier, iere, ir, oea, yerhere, chimaera, we're, ear, feared, beer, peered, lehr, weird, theory (RP), series, revers, eyrie, pier, premiere, souvenir, diarrhoea (RP), twyer
/ɒr/or, orr, ar, arr, aurorange, sorry, quarantine, quarry, laurel
/ɔːr/or, ore, aor, ar, aur, aure, hors, oar, oare, oor, oore, our, oure, ou're, ouire, owar, ohr, uoror, fore, extraordinary, war, dinosaur, roquelaure, hors d'oeuvre, oar, soared, door, floored, four, poured, you're, toward (GA), bohrium, fluoridate
/ɔɪər/oir, awyercoir, lawyer
/ʌr/urr, ur, orr, or, ourhurry, burgh, worry, thorough, courage
/ʊr/ourcourier
/ʊər/oor, our, ure, urpoor, tour, sure, rural
/jʊər/ure, ur, eurcure, purity, neural

History

Inconsistencies between English pronunciation and English spelling have gradually increased ever since the late medieval and early modern period of English's history, with the greatest changes a consequence of English pronunciation naturally diverging across many centuries, while the spelling often remains frozen in an earlier period. This has resulted in modern English spelling being only somewhat phonetically representative. There are a number of contributing factors to the difficulty of modern orthography but, most importantly, gradual changes in pronunciation, such as the Great Vowel Shift, account for a tremendous number of irregularities or conservative English spellings that persist without accurately reflecting the now-current pronunciations. Also, more recent loan words generally carry their original spellings (or spellings that follow transliterations operating according to their own non-English conventions). These loan spellings are thus often not phonetic in English; this includes Romanized words from languages written using non-Roman scripts.

The fairly regular spelling system (originally, the runic alphabet, but later the Latin alphabet) of Old English was swept away by the Norman Conquest in 1066, and the English language as a whole was supplanted in some elite spheres by Norman French for three centuries, eventually emerging with its spelling much influenced by the French writing system (with its Latin letters). English also borrowed massive numbers of words from French during this period, and some kept their French spellings regardless of English pronunciation. The spelling in Middle English texts is very variable, since no standardised spelling existed then, with the same word being spelled in different ways by various authors or even the same author, sometimes even in the same sentence. Instead, spellings at the time were generally meant to more closely resemble the writer's own pronunciation (or accents of the characters they wrote about).

For example, /ʌ/, normally written ⟨u⟩, is spelled with an ⟨o⟩ in done, some, love, etc., due to Norman spelling conventions which prohibited writing ⟨u⟩ before ⟨m, n, v⟩ due to the graphical confusion that would result. (⟨n, u, v⟩ were written identically with two minims in Norman handwriting; ⟨w⟩ was written as two ⟨u⟩ letters; ⟨m⟩ was written with three minims, hence ⟨mm⟩ looked like ⟨vun, nvu, uvu⟩, etc.). Similarly, spelling conventions also prohibited final ⟨v⟩. Hence the identical spellings of the three different vowel sounds in love, move, and cove are due to ambiguity in the Middle English spelling system, not sound change.

In 1417, Henry V began using English for official correspondence instead of the Latin or French of his predecessors, the latter two languages already having standardised spelling by then. For instance, Latin had one spelling for right (rectus), Old French as used in English law had six and Middle English had 77.[citation needed] English spelling gradually settled into a standardised form too, though the process took some 500 years.

There was also a series of linguistic sound changes towards the end of the late medieval period, including the Great Vowel Shift, largely responsible for transitioning Middle English into Early Modern English. One such change was the ⟨a⟩ in make, name, and case, for example, changing from a pure vowel to a diphthong. These changes for the most part did not detract from the rule-governed nature of the spelling system; but, in some cases, they introduced confusing inconsistencies, like the well-known example of the many pronunciations of ⟨ough⟩ (tough, through, though, cough, plough, etc.). Most of these changes happened before the arrival of printing in England. However, the arrival of the modern printing press in 1476 in some ways froze phonetic spellings of the time, rather than providing the impetus spelling to realign with ever-changing pronunciations. Furthermore, the press introduced further inconsistencies, partly because of the use of typesetters trained abroad, particularly in the Low Countries. For example, the ⟨h⟩ in ghost was influenced by Flemish, whereas the word was often previously spelled gost. The addition and deletion of a silent e at the ends of words was also sometimes used to make the right-hand margin line up more neatly (though many cases of silent e already existed by this time, having been fully pronounced in earlier varieties of Middle English).

To make matters more complex, literary scholars in the 17th century sometimes added in silent letters to words merely to hearken back to their Latin origins, such as the b in debt and doubt and the p in receipt, which, though never pronounced, were inserted during this period. In other instances, scholars even added letters under the mistaken assumption that they were once pronounced or due to mistaken etymologies (such as the relatively recent l in could, meant to mirror the spellings of would and should).

As literacy rose, and by the time dictionaries were introduced in the mid-17th century, the spelling system of English was starting to stabilise. Occasionally (though rarely), deliberate initiatives in favour of one spelling or another succeeded. In the early 19th century, for instance, American lexicographer Noah Webster, who published children's spelling books and Webster's Dictionary, was hugely influential at popularising a small number of spelling conventions that solidified in American English but that did not catch on in British English. By the 19th century, most words in the English language had set spellings. Even today, the orthographies of British, American, and other dialects of English align for the most part. In The Mill on the Floss (1860), English novelist George Eliot satirised the attitude of the English rural gentry of the 1820s towards orthography:

Mr. Tulliver did not willingly write a letter, and found the relation between spoken and written language, briefly known as spelling, one of the most puzzling things in this puzzling world. Nevertheless, like all fervid writing, the task was done in less time than usual, and if the spelling differed from Mrs. Glegg's,–why, she belonged, like himself, to a generation with whom spelling was a matter of private judgment.

The modern English spelling system, with its slightly distinct national variants, spread together with the later-19th-century expansion of public education, which has rigorously reinforced a sense of "right" and "wrong" spelling.

See also


Conventions

Variant spelling

Graphemes

Phonetic orthographic systems

English scripts

Words in English

English phonology

Orthographies of English-related languages

Germanic languages

Romance languages

Celtic languages

Historical languages

Constructed languages

Notes

Bibliography