Kirshenbaum, sometimes called ASCII-IPA, is a system used to represent the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) in ASCII. It was developed for Usenet, notably the newsgroups sci.lang and alt.usage.english. It is named after Evan Kirshenbaum, who led the collaboration that created it.
Like the more common SAMPA, the system uses lower-case letters to represent the directly corresponding IPA character. However, the mapping used to represent other characters often differs. For example:—
| Sound | IPA | SAMPA | Kirshenbaum |
|---|---|---|---|
| ae ligature | { | & | |
| reversed script a | Q | A. | |
| reversed epsilon | 3 | V" | |
| primary stress | " | ' | |
| secondary stress | % | , |
| Kirshenbaum chart of consonants
(the paired signs are voiceless/voiced consonants) | |||||||||||||
| Bilabials | Labiodentals | Dentals | Alveolars | Retroflexes | Palato-alveolars | Palatals | Velars | Uvulars | Labiovelars | Pharyngeals | Glottals | Alveolar laterals | |
| Nasals | m | M | |
n | n. | n^ | N | n" | n<lbv> | ||||
| Stops | p b | t d | t. d. | c J | k g | q G | t<lbv> d<lbv> | ? | |||||
| Fricatives | P B | f v | T D | s z | s. z. | S Z | C C<vcd> | x Q | X g" | w<vls> w | H H<vcd> | h> | s |
| Approximants | r<lbd> | r | r. | j | j<vel> | g" | w | h | |||||
| Laterals | l | l. | l^ | L | |||||||||
| Trills | b<trl> | r<trl> | r" | ||||||||||
| Flaps | |||||||||||||
| Ejectives | p` | t` | c` | k` | q` | ||||||||
| Implosives | b` | d` | d` | J` | g` | G` | |||||||
| Clicks | p! | t! | c! | c! | k! | l! | |||||||
| Modifier/diacritic | Meaning |
| ! | Click |
| " | Uvular |
| - | Syllabic |
| . | Retroflex |
| ; | Palatalized |
| Dental | |
| ^ | Palatal |
| ` | Voiced: Implosive Unvoiced: Ejective |
| ~ | Velarized |
| <?> | Murmured |
| <H> | Pharyngealized |
| <h> | Aspirated |
| <j> | Palatalized |
| <o> | Unexploded |
| <r> | Rhoticized |
| <w> | Labialized |
| Kirshenbaum simplified chart of vowels (the paired signs are unrounded/rounded vowels; symbols in parentheses designate vowels that exist in some spoken languages, but do not have IPA signs) | ||||
| Front | Central | Back | Rhotic | |
| Close | i y | i" u" | u- u | |
| Near-close | I I. | (U-) U | ||
| Close-mid | e Y | @<umd> @. | o- o | R<umd> |
| Mid | @ | R | Open-mid | E W | V" O" | V O |
| Near-open | & | &" | (no symbols) | |
| Open | a a. | (a" A".) | A A. | |
| Modifier/diacritic | Meaning |
| ~ | Nasalized |
| : | Long |
| - | Unrounded |
| . | Rounded |
| " | Centralized |
| <?> | Murmured |
| <r> | Rhoticized |
Stress is indicated by ' for primary stress, and , for secondary stress, placed before the stressed syllable.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Kirshenbaum".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world