Help:IPA/Greenlandic

The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents Greenlandic pronunciations in Wikipedia articles. For a guide to adding IPA characters to Wikipedia articles, see and Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Pronunciation § Entering IPA characters.

See Greenlandic phonology and Inuit phonology for a more thorough look at the sounds of Greenlandic and other Inuit languages.

Consonants
IPA Examples nearest English equivalent
çː agguut hue
affaq for
ɣ igaaq Spanish fuego
j qajaq yes
k kukik ski
l aleqa land
ɬː illu By getting the tongue up to the roof and giving a quick breath out; Welsh llwyd.
m mannik man
n nuna now
ŋ angut sing
ɴ arnaq like ng but further down the throat
p putu spoil
q qajaq like k but further down the throat
ʁ erinaq French rester
s sisamat soon
t tallimat stop
ts timi, atsa cats
v savik love
χː tarraq like Scottish loch but further down the throat
Vowels
IPA Examples nearest English equivalent
a aja cat
aak mad
ɑ qajaq like father, but shorter
ɑː aaq father
ɜ erneq bet or but
ɜː meeraq Australian bear or Australian burn
i isi meat
kiinaq knee
ɔ oqaq off
ɔː sooq more
u pukusuk roof
ʉ nuna Australian goose
kuuk coo
y ipi roughly like meat, but with rounded lips
Diphthongs
ai iliorarpai irate
  1. Between vowels, Greenlandic consonants can occur either short or long. In IPA, long consonants may be written doubled or be followed by the length sign: /nn/ or /nː/. Long fricatives are voiceless.
  2. The uvular nasal [ɴ] is not found in all dialects and there is dialectal variability regarding its status as a phoneme
  3. Short [t͡s] is in complementary distribution with short [t], with the former appearing before /i/ and the latter elsewhere; both are written ⟨t⟩ and could be analysed as belonging to the same phoneme /t/. Before /i/, long [tt͡s] occurs while long [tt] doesn't, so long [tt͡s] before /i/ could be analysed as long /tt/. However, before /a/ and /u/, both long [tt͡s] and long [tt] occur (except in some dialects, including that of Greenland's third largest town). Long [tt͡s] is always written ⟨ts⟩
  4. The vowels /a, i, u/ are lowered to [ɑ, ɛ~ɜ, ɔ], respectively, before uvular consonants /q, ʁ/.
  5. /u/ is fronted to [ʉ] between two coronal consonants.
  6. /i/ is rounded to [y] before labial consonants.

See also

  • Category:Pages with Greenlandic IPA (43)