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Swedish phonology

Swedish has a large vowel inventory, with nine vowels distinguished in quality and to some degree in quantity, making 18 vowel phonemes in most dialects. Another notable feature is the pitch accent, a development which it shares with Norwegian. Swedish pronunciation of most consonants is similar to that of other Germanic languages.

There are 18 consonant phonemes, of which /ɧ/ and /r/ show considerable variation depending on both social and dialectal context.

Finland Swedish has a slightly different phonology.

Vowels edit

 
The vowel phonemes of Central Standard Swedish in the Stockholm area. From Engstrand (1999:140)

Swedish has nine vowels that, as in many other Germanic languages, exist in pairs of long and short versions.[1] The length covaries with the quality of the vowels, as shown in the table below (long vowels in the first column, short in the second), with short variants being more centered and lax.[1] The length is generally viewed as the primary distinction, with quality being secondary.[2] No short vowels appear in open stressed syllables.[3] The front vowels appear in rounded-unrounded pairs: /ʏ//ɪ/, /yː//iː/, /œ//ɛ/ and /øː//eː/.

Vowel Example Vowel Example
/siːl/ sil ('sieve') ɪ /sɪl/ sill ('herring')
/heːl/ hel ('whole') ɛ /hɛl/ häll ('stone slab')
ɛː /hɛːl/ häl ('heel')
ɑː /mɑːt/ mat ('food') a /mat/ matt ('listless; matte')
/moːl/ mål ('goal') ɔ /mɔl/ moll ('minor [key]')
/buːt/ bot ('penance') ʊ /bʊt/ bott ('lived') (supine)
ʉː /fʉːl/ ful ('ugly') ɵ /fɵl/ full ('full')
/syːl/ syl ('awl') ʏ /sʏl/ syll ('sleeper (railroad tie)')
øː /nøːt/ nöt ('nut') œ /nœt/ nött ('worn')
  • Central Standard Swedish /ʉː/ is a near-close near-front compressed vowel [ʏː] that differs from /yː/ by the type of rounding.[4] In other dialects, /ʉː/ may be central.
  • /ɛ, œ, ɵ/ are mid [ɛ̝, œ̝, ɵ̞].[4]
  • /a/ has been variously described as central [ä][4] and front [a].[5]

Rounded vowels have two types of rounding:

  • /ɵ/, /ʉː/, /ʊ/ and /uː/ are compressed [ɘ̞ᵝ], [ɪᵝː], [ʊᵝ] and [ɯᵝː][6][7][8][9][10]
  • /ʏ/, /yː/, /œ/ and its pre-/r/ allophone [œ̞], /øː/ and its pre-/r/ allophone [œ̞ː], /ɔ/ and /oː/ are protruded [ɪʷ], [iʷː], [ɛ̝ʷ], [ɛ̞ʷ], [eʷː], [ɛ̞ʷː], [ʌʷ] and [ɤʷː].[6][7][10][11][12]

Type of rounding is the primary way of distinguishing /ʉː, ɵ/ from /yː, œ/, especially in Central Standard Swedish.

/ɛː/, /ɛ/ (in stressed syllables), /øː/ (with a few exceptions) and /œ/ are lowered to [æː], [æ], [œ̞ː] and [œ̞], respectively, when preceding /r/.[13][14][15]

The low allophones are becoming unmarked in younger speakers of Stockholm Swedish, so that läsa ('to read') and köpa ('to buy') are pronounced [ˈlæ̂ːsa] and [ˈɕœ̂ːpa] instead of standard [ˈlɛ̂ːsa] and [ˈɕø̂ːpa].[15] These speakers often also pronounce pre-rhotic /øː/ and /œ/ even lower, i.e. [ɶː] and [ɶ].[15] This is especially true for the long allophone.[15] Also, the [ɶː] allophone is sometimes difficult to distinguish from the long /ɑː/.[15]

In some pronunciations, traditionally characteristic of the varieties spoken around Gothenburg and in Östergötland, but today more common e.g. in Stockholm and especially in younger speakers, [œ] and [ɵ] merge, most commonly into [ɵ] (especially before [r] and the retroflex consonants). Words like fördömande ('judging', pronounced /fœrˈdœ̌mandɛ/ in Standard Swedish) and fördummande ('dumbing', pronounced /fœrˈdɵmandɛ/ in Standard Swedish) are then often pronounced similarly or identically, as [fɵˈɖɵmːandɛ].[16][17]

In Central Standard Swedish, unstressed /ɛ/ is slightly retracted [ɛ̠], but is still a front vowel rather than central [ə]. However, the latter pronunciation is commonly found in Southern Swedish. Therefore, begå 'to commit' is pronounced [bɛ̠ˈɡoː] in Central Standard Swedish and [bəˈɡoː] in Southern Swedish. Before /r/, southerners may use a back vowel [ɔ]. In Central Standard Swedish, a true schwa [ə] is commonly found as a vocalic release of word-final lenis stops, as in e.g. bädd [ˈbɛdːə] 'bed'.[18]

In many central and eastern areas (including Stockholm), the contrast between short /ɛ/ and /e/ is lost.[19] The loss of this contrast has the effect that hetta ('heat') and hätta ('cap') are pronounced the same.

In Central Standard Swedish, long /ɑː/ is weakly rounded [ɒ̜ː].[1][7][20] The rounding is stronger in Gothenburg and weaker in most North Swedish dialects.[20]

One of the varieties of /iː/ is made with a constriction that is more forward than is usual. Peter Ladefoged and Ian Maddieson describe this vowel as being pronounced "by slightly lowering the body of the tongue while simultaneously raising the blade of the tongue (...) Acoustically this pronunciation is characterized by having a very high F3, and an F2 which is lower than that in /eː/." They suggest that this may be the usual Stockholm pronunciation of /iː/.[21]

There is some variation in the interpretations of vowel length's phonemicity. Elert (1964),[22] for example, treats vowel quantity as its own separate phoneme (a "prosodeme") so that long and short vowels are allophones of a single vowel phoneme.

Patterns of diphthongs of long vowels occur in three major dialect groups. In Central Standard Swedish, the high vowels /iː/, /yː/, /ʉː/ and /uː/ are realized as narrow closing diphthongs with fully close ending points: [ɪ̝i ʏ̝y ɵ̝˖ʉ̟ ʊ̝u].[23] According to Engstrand, the second element is so close as to become a palatal or bilabial fricative: [ɪ̝ʝ ʏ̝ʝʷ ɵ̝˖βʲ ʊ̝β].[7] Elsewhere in the article, the broad transcription iː yː ʉː uː is used.

In Central Standard Swedish, /eː/, /øː/ and /oː/ are often realized as centering diphthongs [eə], [øə] and [oə].

In Southern Swedish dialects, particularly in Scania and Blekinge, the diphthongs are preceded by a rising of the tongue from a central position so that /ʉː/ and /ɑː/ are realized as [eʉ] and [aɑ] respectively. A third type of distinctive diphthongs occur in the dialects of Gotland. The pattern of diphthongs is more complex than those of southern and eastern Sweden; /eː/, /øː/ and /ʉː/ tend to rise while /ɛː/ and /oː/ fall; /uː/, /iː/, /yː/ and /ɑː/ are not diphthongized at all.[24]

Consonants edit

The table below shows the Swedish consonant phonemes in spoken Standard Swedish.[25]

/t, l/ are dental [, ],[26] but /n, d, s/ can be either dental [, , ] or alveolar [n, d, s].[27] If /d/ is alveolar, then /n/ is also alveolar.[28] Dental realization of /n, d/ is the predominant one in Central Standard Swedish.[28]

Stops edit

Phoneme Example
p /puːl/ pol ('pole') (of axis)
b /buːk/ bok ('book')
t /tuːk/ tok ('fool')
d /duːp/ dop ('christening')
k /kuːn/ kon ('cone')
ɡ /ɡuːd/ god ('good')

Initial fortis stops (/p, t, k/) are aspirated in stressed position, but unaspirated when preceded by /s/ within the same morpheme.[7] Hence ko ('cow') is [kʰuː], but sko ('shoe') becomes [skuː]. Compare English [kʰuːɫ] ('cool') vs [skuːɫ] ('school'). In Finland Swedish, aspiration does not occur and initial lenis stops /b, d, ɡ/ are usually voiced throughout.[29][30] Word-medial lenis stops are sometimes voiceless in Finland, a likely influence from Finnish.[30]

Preaspiration of medial[31] and final fortis stops,[32] including the devoicing of preceding sonorants[33] is common,[34][35] though its length and normativity varies from dialect to dialect, being optional (and idiolectal[36]) in Central Standard Swedish but obligatory in, for example, the Swedish dialects of Gräsö,[37] Vemdalen and Arjeplog.[38] In Gräsö, preaspiration is blocked in certain environments (such as an /s/ following the fortis consonant[39] or a morpheme boundary between the vowel and the consonant[33]), while it is a general feature of fortis medial consonants in Central Standard Swedish.[33] When not preaspirated, medial and final fortis stops are simply unaspirated.[40] In clusters of fortis stops, the second "presonorant" stop is unaspirated and the former patterns with other medial final stops (that is, it is either unaspirated or is preaspirated).[41]

The phonetic attributes of preaspiration also vary. In the Swedish of Stockholm, preaspiration is often realized as a fricative subject to the character of surrounding vowels or consonants so that it may be labial, velar, or dental; it may also surface as extra length of the preceding vowel.[42] In the province of Härjedalen, though, it resembles [h] or [x].[42] The duration of preaspiration is highest in the dialects of Vemdalen and Arjeplog.[43] Helgason notes that preaspiration is longer after short vowels, in lexically stressed syllables, as well as in pre-pausal position.[31][44]

Fricatives edit

Phoneme Example
f /fuːt/ fot ('foot')
s /suːt/ sot ('soot')
ɕ /ɕuːl/ kjol ('skirt')
ɧ /ɧuːk/ sjok ('chunk')
h /huːt/ hot ('threat')

/s/ is dental [] in Central Standard Swedish,[45][46] but retracted alveolar [] in Blekinge,[47] Bohuslän,[47] Halland[47] and Scania.[47]

The Swedish fricatives /ɕ/ and /ɧ/ are often considered to be the most difficult aspects of Swedish pronunciation for foreign students. The combination of occasionally similar and rather unusual sounds as well as the large variety of partly overlapping allophones of /ɧ/ often presents difficulties for non-natives in telling the two apart. The existence of a third sibilant in the form of /s/ tends to confuse matters even more, and in some cases realizations that are labiodental can also be confused with /f/. In Finland Swedish, /ɕ/ is an affricate: [t͡ɕ] or [t͡ʃ].[29]

The Swedish phoneme /ɧ/ (the "sje-sound" or voiceless postalveolar-velar fricative) and its alleged coarticulation is a difficult and complex issue debated amongst phoneticians.[48] Though the acoustic properties of its [ɧ] allophones are fairly similar, the realizations can vary considerably according to geography, age, gender as well as social context and are notoriously difficult to describe and transcribe accurately. Most common are various sh-like sounds, with [ʂ] occurring mainly in northern Sweden and [ɕ] in Finland. A voiceless uvular fricative, [χ], can sometimes be used in the varieties influenced by major immigrant languages like Arabic and Kurdish. The different realizations can be divided roughly into the following categories:[49]

  • "Dark sounds" – [x], commonly used in the Southern Standard Swedish. Some of the varieties specific, but not exclusive, to areas with a larger immigrant population that commonly realizes the phoneme as a voiceless uvular fricative [χ].
  • "Light sounds" – [ʂ], used in the northern varieties and [ʃ], and [ɕ] (or something in between) in Finland Swedish.
  • Combination of "light" and "dark" – darker sounds are used as morpheme initials preceding stressed vowels (sjuk 'sick', station 'station'), while the lighter sounds are used before unstressed vowels and at the end of morphemes (bagage 'baggage', dusch 'shower').

Sonorants edit

Phoneme Example
m /muːd/ mod ('courage')
n /nuːd/ nod ('node')
ŋ /lɔŋ/ lång ('long')
r /ruːv/ rov ('prey')
l /luːv/ lov ('tack')
v /voːt/ våt ('wet')
j /juːrd/ jord ('earth')

/r/ has distinct variations in Standard Swedish. For most speakers, the realization as an alveolar trill occurs only in contexts where emphatic stress is used.[citation needed] In Central Swedish, it is often pronounced as a fricative (transcribed as [ʐ])[50] or approximant (transcribed as [ɹ]),[7] which is especially frequent in weakly articulated positions such as word-finally[29] and somewhat less frequent in stressed syllable onsets, in particular after other consonants.[50] It may also be an apico-alveolar tap.[29] One of the most distinct features of the southern varieties is the uvular realization of /r/, which may be a trill [ʀ],[51] a fricative [ʁ] or an approximant [ʁ̞]. In Finland, /r/ is usually an apical trill [r], and may be an approximant [ɹ] postvocalically.[52]

Examples of retroflexion[53]
input output gloss
Inflection /fœrt/ [fœ̞ːʈ] fört 'brought' sup
/fœrs/ [fœ̞ːʂ] förs 'is brought' pass
Derivation /fœrˈtɑːl/ [fœ̞ˈʈʰɑːl] förtal 'slander'
/fœrˈsɔrj/ [fœ̞ˈʂɔrj] försorg 'taking care'
Compounds /ˈfœ̂rˌtʉːr/ [ˈfœ̞̂ːˌʈʰʉːr] förtur 'priority'
/ˈfœ̂rˌsɑːl/ [ˈfœ̞̂ːˌʂɑːl] försal 'antechamber'
Across words /fœr ˈtɵn/ [fœ̞ˈʈʰɵnː] för tunn 'too thin'
/fœr ˈseːn/ [fœ̞ˈʂeːn] för sen 'too late'

In most varieties of Swedish that use an alveolar /r/ (in particular, the central and northern forms), the combination of /r/ with dental consonants (/t, d, n, l, s/) produces retroflex consonant realizations ([ʈ, ɖ, ɳ, ɭ, ʂ]), a recursive sandhi process called "retroflexion".[54][55] Thus, /ˈkɑ̂ːrta/ ('map') is realized as [kʰɑ̂ːʈa], /nuːrd/ ('north') as [nuːɖ], /ˈvɛ̂ːnern/ ('Vänern') as [ˈvɛ̂ːnɛɳ], and /fɛrsk/ ('fresh') as [fæʂːk]. The combination of /r/ and /l/, does not uniformly cause retroflexion, so that it may also be pronounced with two separate consonants [rl], and even, occasionally in a few words and expressions, as a mere [l]. Thus sorl ('murmur') may be pronounced [soːɭ], but also [soːrl].[56]

In Gothenburg and neighbouring areas (such as Mölndal and Kungälv) the retroflex consonants are substituted by alveolar ones, with their effects still remaining. For example: /kvɑːrn/ is [kvɑːn] not [kvɑːɳ], /hoːrd/ is [hoːd], not [hoːɖ]. However, /rs/, unlike what many other Swedes believe, is not [s] but [ʃ], i.e. /fɛrs/ is [fæʃː], not [fæsː].[citation needed]

As the adjacent table shows, this process is not limited by word boundaries, though there is still some sensitivity to the type of boundary between the /r/ and the dental in that retroflexion is less likely with boundaries higher up in the prosodic hierarchy.[57] In the southern varieties, which use a uvular /r/,[58] retroflex realizations do not occur.[59] For example, /ˈkɑ̂ːrta/ ('map') is realized as [ˈkʰɑ̌ʁta] (note that Tone 2 in Malmö sounds like Tone 1 in Stockholm), etc.[60] An /r/ spelled ⟨rr⟩ usually will not trigger retroflexion so that spärrnät /ˈspæ̂rˌnɛːt/ ('anti-sub net') is pronounced [ˈspæ̂rːˌnɛːt].[61] The process of retroflexion is not limited to just one dental, and e.g. först is pronounced [fœ̞ʂʈ].[59] Retroflexion also does not usually occur in Finland.[62][63]

Variations of /l/ are not as common, though some phonetic variation exists, such as a retroflex flap [ɽ] that exists as an allophone in proximity to a labial or velar consonant (e.g. glad ('glad')) or after most long vowels.[64]

In casual speech, the nasals tend to assimilate to the place of articulation of a following obstruent so that, for example, han kom ('he came') is pronounced [haŋ ˈkʰɔmː].[65]

/v/ and /j/ are pronounced with weak friction and function phonotactically with the sonorants.[59]

Stress and pitch edit

 
Map of the major tonal dialects of Norwegian and Swedish, from Riad (2014).
• Dark areas have a low tone in accent 2, whereas the light areas have a high tone in accent 2.
• The isogloss marks the boundary between connective and non-connective dialects. East and north of it, all of the compounds get accent 2, whereas west and south of the isogloss, compounds vary in accent.

As in English, there are many Swedish word pairs that are differentiated by stress:

  • formel /ˈfɔ̌rmɛl/ — 'formula'
  • formell /fɔrˈmɛl/ — 'formal'

Stressed syllables carry one of two different tones, often described as pitch accents, or tonal word accents by Scandinavian linguists.[66][67][68] They are called acute and grave accent, accent 1 and accent 2. The actual realization of these two tones varies from dialect to dialect.[69] In the central Swedish dialect of Stockholm, accent 1 is characterized by a low tone at the beginning of the stressed syllable (fìsken ‘the fish’) and accent 2, by a high tone at the beginning of the stressed syllable (mátta ‘mat’).[67] When the word is in a prominent/focused position, a high tone often occurs following the word accent (fì´sken). In accent 2 words, this results in two high tones within the word (e.g. máttá), hence the term "two-peaked" for this dialect. In southern Swedish, a “one-peaked” dialect, accent 1 is realized as a high tone at the beginning of the stressed syllable (físken) and accent 2, by a low tone (màtta).[69] Generally, the grave accent is characterized by a later timing of the word accent pattern as compared with the acute accent.[67]

The phonemicity of this tonal system is demonstrated in the nearly 300 pairs of two-syllable words differentiated only by their use of either grave or acute accent. Outside of these pairs, the main tendency for tone is that the acute accent appears in monosyllables (since the grave accent cannot appear in monosyllabic words) while the grave accent appears in polysyllabic words.[70] Polysyllabic forms resulting from declension or derivation also tend to have a grave accent except when it is the definite article that is added. This tonal distinction has been present in Scandinavian dialects at least since Old Norse though a greater number of polysyllables now have an acute accent. These are mostly words that were monosyllabic in Old Norse, but have subsequently become disyllabic, as have many loanwords.[71] For example, Old Norse kømr ('comes') has become kommer in Swedish (with an acute accent).[70]

The distinction can be shown with the minimal pair anden 'the mallard' (tone 1) and anden 'the spirit' (tone 2).

  • Acute accent: /ˈǎnden/ (realized [ˈa᷇ndɛ̀n] = [ˈan˥˧dɛn˩]) 'the mallard' (from and 'mallard')

In Central Swedish, this is a high, slightly falling tone followed by a low tone; that is, a single drop from high to low pitch spread over two syllables.

  • Grave accent: /ˈânden/ (realized [ˈa᷆ndɛ̂n] = [ˈan˧˩dɛn˥˩]) 'the spirit' (from ande 'spirit')

In Central Swedish, a mid falling tone followed by a high falling tone; that is, a double falling tone.

The exact realization of the tones also depends on the syllable's position in an utterance. For instance, at the beginning of an utterance, the acute accent may have a rising rather than slightly falling pitch on the first syllable. Also, these are word tones that are spread across the syllables of the word. In trisyllabic words with the grave accent, the second fall in pitch is distributed across the second and third syllables:

  • Grave-accent trisyllable: flickorna /ˈflɪ̂kʊɳa/ (realized [ˈflɪ᷆kːʊ᷇ɳà] = [ˈflɪ˧˩kːʊ˥˧ɳa˩]) 'the girls'

The position of the tone is dependent upon stress: The first stressed syllable has a high or falling tone, as does the following syllable(s) in grave-accented words.

In most Finland-Swedish varieties, however, the distinction between grave and acute accent is missing.

A reasonably complete list of uncontroversial so-called minimal pairs can be seen below.[72][circular reference] The two words in each pair are distinguished solely by having different tone (acute vs. grave). In those cases where both words are nouns it would have been possible to list the genitive forms of the words as well, thereby creating another word pair, but this has been avoided. A few word pairs where one of the words is a plural form with the suffix -or have been included. This is due to the fact that many Swedish-speakers in all parts of Sweden pronounce the suffix -or the same way as -er.[citation needed]

Acute accent (accent I) Grave accent (accent II) Translation acute Translation grave
akter akter stern (of boat/ship) acts
almen allmän the elm public, general
A:na ana the As suspect
anden anden the mallard the spirit
backen backen the reverse gear, the crate the slope
balen balen the ball (dance event) the nest
ballen ballen the bulb (on horse) the dick (slang for penis)
B:na bena the Bs parting (hair)
binder bindor binds sanitary towels
biten biten the piece bitten
boken boken the book overripe, spoilt (of fruit)
bona bona the nests polish
bonas bonas the nests' (genitive of 'bona') be polished (passive of 'bona')
borsten borsten the bristles the brush, the broom
brassen brassen the brace (sailing) the Brazilian
breven brevvän the letters pen pal
brister brister breaks (present tense of 'brista') flaws
brunnen brunnen the well burnt (past participle of 'brinna')
brynen brynen the edges (of for example forest) whetstones
brynet brynet the edge (of for example forest) the whetstone
buren buren the cage carried (past participle of 'bära')
busen busen the pranks the hooligan
dragen dragen the trolling spoons drawn (past participle of 'dra'), tipsy
draget draget the draught, the trolling spoon drawn (past participle of 'dra')
drivet drivet the speed, the energy drifted, driven (past participle of 'driva')
E:na ena the Es unite, unify
Enar enar male name junipers
fallen fallen the falls fallen (past participle of 'falla')
fallet fallet the fall fallen (past participle of 'falla')
fäster fester fastens parties
fisken fisken the fish acts of fishing
F:en FN the Fs The UN
fonen fånen the phone (in phonetics) the idiot
fången fången the armfuls the prisoner
fånget fånget the armful caught (past particple of 'fånga')
fällen fällen the rug places where trees have been felled
fäller fällor fells, cuts down traps (plural of the noun 'fälla')
festen fästen the party, the feast places where something has been attached
fören fören the bow (on ship/boat) conditions of the ground for travelling (plural of 'före')
förut förut towards the bow (on ship/boat) before, earlier
gifter gifter marries poisons (plural of 'gift')
giftet giftet the poison the marriage
J:na gina the Js tackle (sailing), take a shortcut
given given the deal (in card games) given
ljusen gjusen the candles the osprey
gripen gripen the griffin grabbed, gripped (past participle of 'gripa')
gången gången the walkway gone (past participle of 'gå')
heden heden the heath heathen (adjective)
hinner hinnor has the time to do something coatings
huggen huggen the cuts (made with a heavy object like an axe) chopped (past participle of 'hugga')
hållen hållen the directions held (past participle of 'hålla')
hållet hållet the direction held (past participle of 'hålla')
H:na håna the Hs mock, taunt
högre högre higher the man to the right (as in 'den högre')
iden iden the ide bears' dens for hibernation
I:na Ina the Is female name
inför inför ahead of, in front of introduces, introduce (present tense or imperative of 'införa')
ljuden juden the sounds the Jew
karaten karaten the carat the karate
katten katten the cat a profanity (as in for example 'Katten också!')
knallen knallen the bang the small hill, the pedlar
knuten knuten the knot tied (past participle of 'knyta')
kubben kubben the bowler hat the chopping block (for wood)
kullen kullen the litter (group of newborn animals) the hill
kåren kåren the corps the breeze
laven laven the lichen the headframe
leder leder leads (present tense of 'leda') joints (anatomy)
lumpen lumpen the military service contemptible, lousy
malen malen the moth ground, milled (past participle of 'mala')
mjölken mjölken the milk the fish seed
modet modet the courage the fashion
moppen moppen the mop the moped
namnen namnen the names the namesake
normen norrmän the norm Norwegians
nubben nubben the tack the shot (alcohol)
nyper nypor pinches (present tense of 'nypa') Grips made with the thumb against one or more of the other fingers (plural noun)
Oden oden name of a Norse God odes
oret orätt the mite injustice
packen packen the rabble (definite plural of 'pack') the bale
pajas pajas clown be destroyed (passive of 'paja')
panter panter panther deposits
perser pärser Persians ordeals
Polen pålen Poland the pole (thick wooden stick)
pollen pållen pollen the horsey
radar radar radar present tense of 'rada', as in 'rada upp' (=list something)
raster raster grid breaks (in school or at a workplace, i.e. for example coffee breaks)
regel regel rule latch
reser resor travels (present tense of 'resa') journeys, trips
rivet rivet the melee, the fighting torn
roller roller cylinder that rotates and is used for painting roles
ruter rutor diamonds (in card games) squares, (window) panes
rutten rutten the route rotten
rågen rågen the rye the overmeasure
råna råna the nymphs rob
räcken räcken the horizontal bars (gymnastics) railings
räcket räcket the horizontal bar (gymnastics) the railing
ränner rännor runs chutes
sabbat sabbat sabbath destroyed, sabotaged (past participle of 'sabba')
ceder seder cedar customs (traditions)
C:na sena the Cs late (plural of 'sen'), sinew
cider sidor cider pages
sikten sikten the view sights (on rifles, plural of 'sikte')
skallen skallen the barks (dog sounds) the skull
skeden skeden the spoon stages (of time)
skiftet skiftet the shift the change
skiften skiften the shifts changes
skjuten skjuten the ejaculations shot (past participle of 'skjuta')
skjutet skjutet the speed, the ejaculation shot (past participle of 'skjuta')
skotten skotten the shots the Scotsman
skuren skuren the (rain) shower cut (past participle of 'skära')
skytten skytten the gunner acts of shooting
slagen slagen the battles, the hits beaten
slaget slaget the battle, the hit beaten
slitet slitet the toil worn
sluten sluten the ends closed (past participle of 'sluta')
slutet slutet the end closed (past participle of 'sluta')
släkten släkten the (extended) family genera (biology)
snuten snuten the cop past participle of 'snyta' (=blow one's nose)
zoona sona the zoos expiate
spaden spaden the stocks (cooking) the spade
spana spana the spas watch, observe, search
spricker sprickor bursts, cracks (present tense of the verb 'spricka') cracks (plural of the noun 'spricka')
stegen stegen the steps the ladder
strider strider fights (present tense of 'strida') fights, battles (plural of the noun 'strid')
stråken stråken the moving patches/bands (of something) the bow (for a violin)
stubben stubben the stubble the tree stump
ställen ställen the racks places (locations)
stället stället the rack the place
sugen sugen the sucking device sucked (past participle of 'suga'), in the mood for something
suget suget the urge sucked (past participle of 'suga'), in the mood for something
säden säden the seed, the grain things intended for sowing (plural of 'säde')
cellen sällen the cell the brute
tagen tagen the grips taken
taget taget the grip taken
tanken tanken the tank the thought
toner toner toner tones
traven traven the trot the pile, the stack
tomten tomten the plot (of land) Santa Claus, the gnome
tummen tummen the inch the thumb
tecken täcken sign bed covers
udden udden the point, the cusp the headland
uppför uppför uphill present tense or imperative of 'uppföra' (=set up a theatre play, behave)
utför utför downhill present tense or imperative of 'utföra' (=carry out)
vaken vaken the hole in the ice awake
valen valen the whale stiff, numb
vanten vanten the shrouds (sailing) the mitten
vasen vasen the vase the bundle of brushwood
viken viken the bay folded (past participle of 'vika')
viner viner makes a whistling sound (of for example wind) wines
vreden vreden the knobs the rage, the wrath
värden/världen värden the host/the world values
Oskar åskar male name present tense of 'åska' (=thunder)
ören ören the gravel pennies (plural of the monetary unit 'öre' used when no numeral immediately precedes the word)
öret öret the gravel the penny (1/100 of a Swedish krona)

Note that karaten/karaten is the only pair with more than two syllables (although we would get a second one if we used the definite forms of the pair perser/pärser, i.e. perserna/pärserna). The word pair länder (=countries, plural of land) and länder (=loins, plural of länd) could have been included, but this one is controversial.[73][circular reference] For those speakers who have grave accent in the plural of länd, the definite plural forms will also constitute a three-syllable minimal pair: länderna (acute accent, =the countries) vs. länderna (grave accent, =the loins). Although examples with more than two syllables are very few in Standard Swedish, it is possible to find other three-syllable pairs in regional dialects, such as Värmländska: hunnera (acute, =the Huns) vs. hunnera (grave, =the dogs), ändera/ännera (acute, =the mallards) vs. ändera/ännera (grave, =the ends), etc.

Prosody in Swedish often varies substantially between different dialects including the spoken varieties of Standard Swedish. As in most languages, stress can be applied to emphasize certain words in a sentence. To some degree prosody may indicate questions, although less so than in English.

Phonotactics edit

At a minimum, a stressed syllable must consist of either a long vowel or a short vowel and a long consonant.[74] Like many other Germanic languages, Swedish has a tendency for closed syllables with a relatively large number of consonant clusters in initial as well as final position. Though not as complex as that of most Slavic languages, examples of up to 7 consecutive consonants can occur when adding Swedish inflections to some foreign loanwords or names, and especially when combined with the tendency of Swedish to make long compound nouns. The syllable structure of Swedish can therefore be described with the following formula:

(C)(C)(C)V(C)(C)(C)

This means that a Swedish one-syllable morpheme can have up to three consonants preceding the vowel that forms the nucleus of the syllable, and three consonants following it. Examples: skrämts /skrɛmts/ (verb 'scare' past participle, passive voice) or sprängts /sprɛŋts/ (verb 'explode' past participle, passive voice). All but one of the consonant phonemes, /ŋ/, can occur at the beginning of a morpheme, though there are only 6 possible three-consonant combinations, all of which begin with /s/, and a total of 31 initial two-consonant combinations. All consonants except for /h/ and /ɕ/ can occur finally, and the total number of possible final two-consonant clusters is 62.

In some cases this can result in very complex combinations, such as in västkustskt /ˈvɛ̂stˌkɵstskt/, consisting of västkust ('west coast') with the adjective suffix -sk and the neuter suffix -t.[75]

Central Standard Swedish and most other Swedish dialects feature a rare "complementary quantity" feature[76] wherein a phonologically short consonant follows a long vowel and a long consonant follows a short vowel; this is true only for stressed syllables and all segments are short in unstressed syllables.[34][37] This arose from the historical shift away from a system with a four-way contrast (that is, VːCː, VC, VːC and VCː were all possible) inherited from Proto-Germanic to a three-way one (VC, VːC and VCː), and finally the present two-way one; certain Swedish dialects have not undergone these shifts and exhibit one of the other two phonotactic systems instead.[77] In literature on Swedish phonology, there are a number of ways to transcribe complementary relationship, including:[78]

  • A length mark ː for either the vowel (/viːt/)[79] or the consonant (/vitː/)[80]
  • Gemination of the consonant (/vit/ vs. /vitt/)
  • Diphthongization of the vowel (/vijt/ vs. /vit/)
  • The position of the stress marker (/viˈt/ vs. /vitˈ/)

With the conventional assumption that medial long consonants are ambisyllabic (that is, penna ('pen'), is syllabified as [ˈpɛ̂n.na]), all stressed syllables are thus "heavy".[78] In unstressed syllables, the distinction is lost between /u/ and /o/ or between /e/ /ɛ/.[29] With each successive post-stress syllable, the number of contrasting vowels decreases gradually with distance from the point of stress; at three syllables from stress, only [a] and [ɛ] occur.[75]

Sample edit

The sample text is a reading of The North Wind and the Sun. The transcriptions are based on the section on Swedish found in The Handbook on the International Phonetic Association, in which a man in his forties from Stockholm is recorded reading out the traditional fable in a manner typical of Central Standard Swedish as spoken in his area. The broad transcription is phonemic, while the narrow is phonetic.[81]

Broad transcription edit

/nuːrdanvɪndɛn ɔ suːlɛn tvɪstadɛ ɛn ɡɔŋː ɔm vɛm ɑːv dɔm sɔm vɑːr starkast || jɵst doː kɔm ɛn vandrarɛ vɛːɡɛn fram | ɪnsveːpt ɛn varm kapːa || dɔm kɔm doː øːvɛrɛns ɔm | at dɛn sɔm fœrst kɵndɛ foː vandrarɛn at ta ɑːv sɛj kapːan | han skɵlːɛ anseːs vɑːra starkarɛ ɛn dɛn andra || doː bloːstɛ nuːrdanvɪndɛn hoːrt han nɔnsɪn kɵndɛ | mɛn jʉː hoːrdarɛ han bloːstɛ dɛstʊ tɛːtarɛ sveːptɛ vandrarɛn kapːan ɔm sɛj | ɔ tɪl slʉːt ɡɑːv nuːrdanvɪndɛn ɵpː fœrsøːkɛt || doː lɛːt suːlɛn siːna stroːlar ɧiːna heːlt varmt ɔ jeːnast tuːɡ vandrarɛn ɑːv sɛj kapːan | ɔ soː vɑːr nuːrdanvɪndɛn tvɵŋɛn at eːrɕɛnːa at suːlɛn vɑːr dɛn starkastɛ ɑːv dɔm tvoː/

Narrow transcription edit

[ˈnuːɖaɱˌvɪnˑdɛn ɔ ˈsuːlɛn ˈtv̥ɪsːtadɛ ɛŋ ˈɡɔŋː ɔɱ ˈvɛmˑ ɑv ˌdɔm sɔɱ vɑˑ ˈstaɹːcast || ˈʝɵsˑt ˈd̥oː kʰɔm ɛɱ ˈvanːdɾaɾɛ ˈvɛːɡəɱ fɾam | ˈɪnˌsv̥eə̯pt ɛɱ vaɹˑm ˈcʰapːa || dɔm kʰɔm doˑ øə̯vɛˈɾɛnːs ˈɔmˑ at dɛn sɔm ˈfɵʂːʈ kʰɵnˑdɛ foˑ ˈvanːdɹ̝aɹɛn at ˈtʰɑː ɑˑv sɛj ˈcʰapːan | hanˑ skɵlˑɛ ˈanːˌseːs vɑˑ ˈstaɹːcaɾɛ ɛn dɛn ˈandɾa || doː ˈbloə̯stɛ ˈnuːɖaɱˌvɪnˑdɛn soˑ ˈhoːʈ han ˈnɔnːˌsɪŋ ˈkʰɵnːdɛ | mɛɳ ʝʉˑ ˈhoːɖaɾɛ ham ˈbloə̯stɛ | dɛsˑtʊ ˈtʰɛːtaɾɛ ˈsv̥eə̯ptɛ ˈvanːdɹ̝aɹɛŋ ˈcʰapːan ˈɔmˑ sɛj | ɔ tʰɪl ˈslʉːt ɡɑˑv ˈnuːɖaɱˌvɪnˑdɛn ˈɵpː fœ̞ˈʂøə̯cɛt || doˑ lɛˑt ˈsuːlɛn siˑna ˈstɾoːlaɹ ˈɧiːna heˑlt ˈvaɹːmt | ɔ ˈʝeːnast tʰuˑɡ ˈvanːdɹ̝aɹɛn ˈɑːv sɛj ˈcʰapːan | ɔ soˑ vɑˑ ˈnuːɖaɱˌvɪnˑdɛn ˈtvɵŋːɛn at ˈeːɹˌɕɛnːa at ˈsuːlɛn vɑˑ dɛn ˈstaɹːcastɛ ɑˑv dɔm ˈtv̥oː]

Orthographic version edit

Nordanvinden och solen tvistade en gång om vem av dem som var starkast. Just då kom en vandrare vägen fram, insvept i en varm kappa. De kom då överens om att den som först kunde få vandraren att ta av sig kappan, han skulle anses vara starkare än den andra. Då blåste nordanvinden så hårt han någonsin kunde, men ju hårdare han blåste, desto tätare svepte vandraren kappan om sig, och till slut gav nordanvinden upp försöket. Då lät solen sina strålar skina helt varmt och genast tog vandraren av sig kappan, och så var nordanvinden tvungen att erkänna att solen var den starkaste av de två.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Andersson (2002), p. 272.
  2. ^ Schaeffler (2005), p. 26; citing Elert (1964), Gårding (1974), and Bannert (1976).
  3. ^ Schaeffler (2005), pp. 7–8.
  4. ^ a b c Engstrand (1999), p. 140.
  5. ^ Thorén & Petterson (1992), p. 15.
  6. ^ a b Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996), pp. 295–6.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Engstrand (1999), p. 141.
  8. ^ Elmquist (1915), p. 31.
  9. ^ Thorén & Petterson (1992), pp. 11–2, 14–5, 17–8.
  10. ^ a b Riad (2014), p. 27.
  11. ^ Elmquist (1915), p. 33.
  12. ^ Thorén & Petterson (1992), pp. 8–11, 13–4, 16–7.
  13. ^ Eliasson (1986), p. 273.
  14. ^ Thorén & Petterson (1992), pp. 13–5.
  15. ^ a b c d e Riad (2014), p. 38.
  16. ^ Engstrand (2004), pp. 115–6.
  17. ^ Riad (2014), pp. 29, 38–9.
  18. ^ Riad (2014), pp. 22, 48–9.
  19. ^ Fant (1983), p. 2.
  20. ^ a b Riad (2014), pp. 35–6.
  21. ^ Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996), p. 292. The symbols "i" and "e" used in the original citation were changed to /iː/ and /eː/ to keep this article consistent.
  22. ^ Cited in Schaeffler (2005, p. 8).
  23. ^ McAllister, Lubker & Carlson (1974); cited in Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996, p. 295).
  24. ^ Elert (2000), pp. 38–43.
  25. ^ Table adapted from Engstrand (2004, p. 167).
  26. ^ Riad (2014), pp. 46, 67.
  27. ^ Riad (2014), pp. 46, 58.
  28. ^ a b Riad (2014), p. 46.
  29. ^ a b c d e Andersson (2002), p. 273.
  30. ^ a b Ringen & Suomi (2012).
  31. ^ a b Helgason (1998), p. 53.
  32. ^ Ringen & Helgason (2004), p. 56.
  33. ^ a b c Helgason (1999a), p. 80.
  34. ^ a b Tronnier (2002), p. 33.
  35. ^ Helgason (1999b), p. 1851.
  36. ^ Helgason (1999b), p. 1854.
  37. ^ a b Wretling, Strangert & Schaeffler (2002), p. 703; citing Helgason (1999a).
  38. ^ Wretling, Strangert & Schaeffler (2002), p. 706.
  39. ^ Helgason (1999b), p. 1853.
  40. ^ Ringen & Helgason (2004), p. 59.
  41. ^ Petrova et al. (2006), p. 20; citing Ringen & Helgason (2004).
  42. ^ a b Liberman (1978), pp. 64ff.
  43. ^ Wretling, Strangert & Schaeffler (2002), p. 704.
  44. ^ Helgason (1999b), pp. 1852–3.
  45. ^ Engstrand (1999), pp. 140–1.
  46. ^ Engstrand (2004), p. 167.
  47. ^ a b c d Adams (1975), p. 289.
  48. ^ Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996), pp. 171–2, 329–30.
  49. ^ Garlén (1988), pp. 71–2.
  50. ^ a b Elert (2000).
  51. ^ Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996), pp. 225–6.
  52. ^ Riad (2014), pp. 68, 75.
  53. ^ Table modified from Hamann (2003, p. 84), citing Eliasson (1986).
  54. ^ Eliasson (1986), pp. 278–9.
  55. ^ "Postalveolarization" and "supradentalization" are also common terms.
  56. ^ Eliasson (1986), p. 279.
  57. ^ Hamann (2003), p. 84; citing Eliasson (1986, p. 282).
  58. ^ Those south of Kalmar, Jönköping and Falkenberg; a little north of these cities, a uvular rhotic appears in initial position and as a long consonant (Andersson 2002, p. 273).
  59. ^ a b c Andersson (2002), p. 274.
  60. ^ Garlén (1988), pp. 73–4.
  61. ^ Eliasson (1986), p. 281.
  62. ^ Riad (2014), p. 73.
  63. ^ Reuter (1992), p. 108.
  64. ^ Andersson (2002), pp. 273–4.
  65. ^ Eliasson (1986), p. 276.
  66. ^ Gårding (1974).
  67. ^ a b c Bruce (1977).
  68. ^ Riad (2014).
  69. ^ a b Bruce (2010).
  70. ^ a b Liberman (1982), p. 13.
  71. ^ Engstrand (2004), pp. 186–90.
  72. ^ Translated from a Swedish-only Wikipedia article.
  73. ^ From the Discussion section of the Swedish article.
  74. ^ Schaeffler (2005), p. 7.
  75. ^ a b Garlén (1988), pp. 101–14.
  76. ^ Schaeffler (2005), p. 9.
  77. ^ Schaeffler (2005), p. 39.
  78. ^ a b Schaeffler (2005), p. 8; citing Elert (1964).
  79. ^ E.g. Elert (1964, p. 43).
  80. ^ E.g. Eliasson & La Pelle (1973) and Riad (1992).
  81. ^ Engstrand (1999), pp. 140–2.

References edit

  • Adams, Douglas Q. (1975), "The Distribution of Retracted Sibilants in Medieval Europe", Language, Linguistic Society of America, 51 (2): 282–292, doi:10.2307/412855, JSTOR 412855
  • Andersson, Erik (2002), "Swedish", in König, Ekkehard; van der Auwera, Johan (eds.), The Germanic Languages, Routledge language family descriptions, Routledge, pp. 271–312, ISBN 0-415-28079-6
  • Bannert, R. (1976), Mittelbayerische Phonologie auf Akustischer und Perzeptorischer Grundlage, Lund: Gleerup
  • Bruce, Gösta (1977), Swedish Word Accents in Sentence Perspective (PDF), Liber, ISBN 91-40-04589-7
  • Bruce, Gösta (2010), Vår fonetiska geografi, Studentlitteratur, ISBN 9789144050539
  • Elert, Claes-Christian (1964), Phonologic Studies of Quantity in Swedish, Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksell
  • Elert, Claes-Christian (2000), Allmän och svensk fonetik (in Swedish) (8th ed.), Stockholm: Norstedts, ISBN 91-1-300939-7
  • Eliasson, Stig (1986), "Sandhi in Peninsular Scandinavian", in Anderson, Henning (ed.), Sandhi Phenomena in the Languages of Europe, Berlin: de Gruyter, pp. 271–300
  • Eliasson, Stig; La Pelle, N. (1973), "Generativa regler för svenskans kvantitet", Arkiv för nordisk filologi, 88: 133–148
  • Elmquist, A. Louis (1915), Swedish phonology, Chicago: The Engberg-Holmberg Publishing Company
  • Engstrand, Olle (1999), "Swedish", Handbook of the International Phonetic Association: A Guide to the usage of the International Phonetic Alphabet., Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 140–142, ISBN 0-521-63751-1
  • Engstrand, Olle (2004), Fonetikens grunder (in Swedish), Lund: Studenlitteratur, ISBN 91-44-04238-8
  • Fant, G. (1983), "Feature analysis of Swedish vowels – a revisit", Speech, Music and Hearing Quarterly Progress and Status Report, 24 (2–3): 1–19
  • Garlén, Claes (1988), Svenskans fonologi (in Swedish), Lund: Studenlitteratur, ISBN 91-44-28151-X
  • Gårding, E. (1974), Kontrastiv prosodi, Lund: Gleerup
  • Hamann, Silke (2003), The Phonetics and Phonology of Retroflexes, Utrecht, ISBN 90-76864-39-X{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Helgason, Pétur (1998), "On-line preaspiration in Swedish: implications for historical sound change", Proceedings of Sound Patterns of Spontaneous Speech, vol. 98, pp. 51–54
  • Helgason, Pétur (1999a), "Preaspiration and sonorant devoicing in the Gräsö dialect: preliminary findings.", Proceedings of the Swedish Phonetics Conference 1999, Gothenburg Papers in Theoretical Linguistics, Göteborg University, pp. 77–80
  • Helgason, Pétur (1999b), "Phonetic preconditions for the development of normative preaspiration", Proceedings of the 14th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, San Francisco, pp. 1851–1854{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-19815-6.
  • Liberman, Anatoly (1978), "Pseudo-støds in Scandinavian languages", Orbis, 27: 52–76
  • Liberman, Anatoly (1982), Germanic Accentology, vol. 1: The Scandinavian Languages, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press
  • McAllister, Robert; Lubker, James; Carlson, Johann (1974), "An EMG study of some characteristics of the Swedish rounded vowels", Journal of Phonetics, 2 (4): 267–278, doi:10.1016/S0095-4470(19)31297-5
  • Petrova, Olga; Plapp, Rosemary; Ringen, Ringen; Szentgyörgyi, Szilárd (2006), "Voice and aspiration: Evidence from Russian, Hungarian, German, Swedish, and Turkish", The Linguistic Review, 23: 1–35, doi:10.1515/tlr.2006.001, S2CID 42712078
  • Reuter, Mikael (1992), "Swedish as a pluricentric language", in Clyne, Michael (ed.), Pluricentric Languages: Differing Norms in Different Nations, Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, pp. 101–116
  • Riad, Tomas (1992), Structures in Germanic Prosody, Department of Scandinavian Languages, Stockholm University
  • Riad, Tomas (2006), (PDF), STUF – Sprachtypologie und Universalienforschung, 59 (1): 36–55, doi:10.1524/stuf.2006.59.1.36, S2CID 120424722, archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-08
  • Riad, Tomas (2014), The Phonology of Swedish, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-954357-1
  • Ringen, Catherine; Helgason, Pétur (2004), "Distinctive [voice] does not imply regressive assimilation: evidence from Swedish", International Journal of English Studies: Advances in Optimality Theory, 4 (2): 53–71
  • Ringen, Catherine; Suomi, Katri (2012), "The voicing contrast in Fenno-Swedish stops", Journal of Phonetics, 40 (3): 419–429, doi:10.1016/j.wocn.2012.02.010
  • Schaeffler, Felix (2005), "Phonological Quantity in Swedish Dialects", Phonum, 10
  • Thorén, Bosse; Petterson, Nils-Owe (1992), Svenska Utifrån Uttalsanvisningar, Svenska institutet, ISBN 91-520-0284-5
  • Thorén, Bosse (1997), Swedish prosody
  • Tronnier, Mechtild (2002), "Preaspiration in Southern Swedish dialects", Proceedings of Fonetik, 44 (1): 33–36
  • Wretling, P.; Strangert, E.; Schaeffler, F. (2002), "Quantity and Preaspiration in Northern Swedish Dialects", in Bel, B; Marlien, I. (eds.), Proceedings of the Speech Prosody 2002 conference, Aix-en-Provence: Laboratoire Parole et Langage, pp. 703–706

Further reading edit

  • Bolander, Maria (2001), Funktionell svensk grammatik (1st ed.), Liber AB, ISBN 9789147050543
  • Dahlstedt, Karl-Hampus (1967), Svårigheter i svenskans uttal, Modersmålslärarnas förening
  • Garlén, Claes (2003), Svenska Språknämndens Uttalsordbok, Svenska Språknämnden, ISBN 978-9172273092
  • Hedelin, Per (1997), Norstedts Svenska Uttalslexikon, Norstedts Ordbok, ISBN 9789119711229
  • Kuronen, Mikko (2000), Vokaluttalets akustik i sverigesvenska, finlandssvenska och finska (PDF), University of Jyväskylä, ISBN 978-951-39-4093-5
  • Kuronen, Mikko (2001), "Acoustic character of vowel pronunciation in Sweden-Swedish and Finland-Swedish" (PDF), Lund University Department of Linguistics Working Papers (49): 94–97
  • Leinonen, Therese (2010), An Acoustic Analysis of Vowel Pronunciation in Swedish Dialects (PDF), University of Groningen, ISBN 978-90-367-4450-8
  • Lundskær-Nielsen, Tom; Barnes, Michael; Lindskog, Annika (2005), Introduction to Scandinavian phonetics: Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish, Alfabeta, ISBN 978-8763600095
  • Rosenqvist, Håkan (2007), Uttalsboken: svenskt uttal i praktik och teori, Stockholm: Natur & Kultur, ISBN 978-91-27-40645-2
  • Torp, Arne (2001). "Retroflex consonants and dorsal /r/: mutually excluding innovations? On the diffusion of dorsal /r/ in Scandinavian". In van de Velde, Hans; van Hout, Roeland (eds.). 'r-atics. Brussels: Etudes & Travaux. pp. 75–90. ISSN 0777-3692. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)

External links edit

swedish, phonology, assistance, with, transcriptions, swedish, wikipedia, articles, help, swedish, this, article, contains, phonetic, transcriptions, international, phonetic, alphabet, introductory, guide, symbols, help, distinction, between, brackets, transcr. For assistance with IPA transcriptions of Swedish for Wikipedia articles see Help IPA Swedish This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters This article includes inline links to audio files If you have trouble playing the files see Wikipedia Media help Swedish has a large vowel inventory with nine vowels distinguished in quality and to some degree in quantity making 18 vowel phonemes in most dialects Another notable feature is the pitch accent a development which it shares with Norwegian Swedish pronunciation of most consonants is similar to that of other Germanic languages There are 18 consonant phonemes of which ɧ and r show considerable variation depending on both social and dialectal context Finland Swedish has a slightly different phonology Contents 1 Vowels 2 Consonants 2 1 Stops 2 2 Fricatives 2 3 Sonorants 3 Stress and pitch 4 Phonotactics 5 Sample 5 1 Broad transcription 5 2 Narrow transcription 5 3 Orthographic version 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksVowels edit nbsp The vowel phonemes of Central Standard Swedish in the Stockholm area From Engstrand 1999 140 Front Central Backunrounded roundedshort long short long short long short longClose ɪ iː ʏ yː ʉː ʊ uːClose mid e eː oː ɵ oːOpen mid ɛ ɛː œ ɔOpen a ɑːSwedish has nine vowels that as in many other Germanic languages exist in pairs of long and short versions 1 The length covaries with the quality of the vowels as shown in the table below long vowels in the first column short in the second with short variants being more centered and lax 1 The length is generally viewed as the primary distinction with quality being secondary 2 No short vowels appear in open stressed syllables 3 The front vowels appear in rounded unrounded pairs ʏ ɪ yː iː œ ɛ and oː eː Vowel Example Vowel Exampleiː siːl sil sieve ɪ sɪl sill herring eː heːl hel whole ɛ hɛl hall stone slab ɛː hɛːl hal heel ɑː mɑːt mat food a mat matt listless matte oː moːl mal goal ɔ mɔl moll minor key uː buːt bot penance ʊ bʊt bott lived supine ʉː fʉːl ful ugly ɵ fɵl full full yː syːl syl awl ʏ sʏl syll sleeper railroad tie oː noːt not nut œ nœt nott worn Central Standard Swedish ʉː is a near close near front compressed vowel ʏː that differs from yː by the type of rounding 4 In other dialects ʉː may be central ɛ œ ɵ are mid ɛ œ ɵ 4 a has been variously described as central a 4 and front a 5 Rounded vowels have two types of rounding ɵ ʉː ʊ and uː are compressed ɘ ᵝ ɪᵝː ʊᵝ and ɯᵝː 6 7 8 9 10 ʏ yː œ and its pre r allophone œ oː and its pre r allophone œ ː ɔ and oː are protruded ɪʷ iʷː ɛ ʷ ɛ ʷ eʷː ɛ ʷː ʌʷ and ɤʷː 6 7 10 11 12 Type of rounding is the primary way of distinguishing ʉː ɵ from yː œ especially in Central Standard Swedish ɛː ɛ in stressed syllables oː with a few exceptions and œ are lowered to aeː ae œ ː and œ respectively when preceding r 13 14 15 ara ˈɛ ːra ˈae ːra honor art ˈɛrt ˈaeʈː pea ora ˈo ːra ˈœ ːra ear dorr ˈdœr ˈdœ rː door The low allophones are becoming unmarked in younger speakers of Stockholm Swedish so that lasa to read and kopa to buy are pronounced ˈlae ːsa and ˈɕœ ːpa instead of standard ˈlɛ ːsa and ˈɕo ːpa 15 These speakers often also pronounce pre rhotic oː and œ even lower i e ɶː and ɶ 15 This is especially true for the long allophone 15 Also the ɶː allophone is sometimes difficult to distinguish from the long ɑː 15 In some pronunciations traditionally characteristic of the varieties spoken around Gothenburg and in Ostergotland but today more common e g in Stockholm and especially in younger speakers œ and ɵ merge most commonly into ɵ especially before r and the retroflex consonants Words like fordomande judging pronounced fœrˈdœ mandɛ in Standard Swedish and fordummande dumbing pronounced fœrˈdɵmandɛ in Standard Swedish are then often pronounced similarly or identically as fɵˈɖɵmːandɛ 16 17 In Central Standard Swedish unstressed ɛ is slightly retracted ɛ but is still a front vowel rather than central e However the latter pronunciation is commonly found in Southern Swedish Therefore bega to commit is pronounced bɛ ˈɡoː in Central Standard Swedish and beˈɡoː in Southern Swedish Before r southerners may use a back vowel ɔ In Central Standard Swedish a true schwa e is commonly found as a vocalic release of word final lenis stops as in e g badd ˈbɛdːe bed 18 In many central and eastern areas including Stockholm the contrast between short ɛ and e is lost 19 The loss of this contrast has the effect that hetta heat and hatta cap are pronounced the same In Central Standard Swedish long ɑː is weakly rounded ɒ ː 1 7 20 The rounding is stronger in Gothenburg and weaker in most North Swedish dialects 20 One of the varieties of iː is made with a constriction that is more forward than is usual Peter Ladefoged and Ian Maddieson describe this vowel as being pronounced by slightly lowering the body of the tongue while simultaneously raising the blade of the tongue Acoustically this pronunciation is characterized by having a very high F3 and an F2 which is lower than that in eː They suggest that this may be the usual Stockholm pronunciation of iː 21 There is some variation in the interpretations of vowel length s phonemicity Elert 1964 22 for example treats vowel quantity as its own separate phoneme a prosodeme so that long and short vowels are allophones of a single vowel phoneme Patterns of diphthongs of long vowels occur in three major dialect groups In Central Standard Swedish the high vowels iː yː ʉː and uː are realized as narrow closing diphthongs with fully close ending points ɪ i ʏ y ɵ ʉ ʊ u 23 According to Engstrand the second element is so close as to become a palatal or bilabial fricative ɪ ʝ ʏ ʝʷ ɵ bʲ ʊ b 7 Elsewhere in the article the broad transcription iː yː ʉː uː is used In Central Standard Swedish eː oː and oː are often realized as centering diphthongs ee oe and oe In Southern Swedish dialects particularly in Scania and Blekinge the diphthongs are preceded by a rising of the tongue from a central position so that ʉː and ɑː are realized as eʉ and aɑ respectively A third type of distinctive diphthongs occur in the dialects of Gotland The pattern of diphthongs is more complex than those of southern and eastern Sweden eː oː and ʉː tend to rise while ɛː and oː fall uː iː yː and ɑː are not diphthongized at all 24 Consonants editThe table below shows the Swedish consonant phonemes in spoken Standard Swedish 25 Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar GlottalNasal m n ŋPlosive voiceless p t kvoiced b d ɡFricative f s ɕ ɧ hApproximant v l jRhotic r t l are dental t l 26 but n d s can be either dental n d s or alveolar n d s 27 If d is alveolar then n is also alveolar 28 Dental realization of n d is the predominant one in Central Standard Swedish 28 Stops edit Phoneme Examplep puːl pol pole of axis b buːk bok book t tuːk tok fool d duːp dop christening k kuːn kon cone ɡ ɡuːd god good Initial fortis stops p t k are aspirated in stressed position but unaspirated when preceded by s within the same morpheme 7 Hence ko cow is kʰuː but sko shoe becomes skuː Compare English kʰuːɫ cool vs skuːɫ school In Finland Swedish aspiration does not occur and initial lenis stops b d ɡ are usually voiced throughout 29 30 Word medial lenis stops are sometimes voiceless in Finland a likely influence from Finnish 30 Preaspiration of medial 31 and final fortis stops 32 including the devoicing of preceding sonorants 33 is common 34 35 though its length and normativity varies from dialect to dialect being optional and idiolectal 36 in Central Standard Swedish but obligatory in for example the Swedish dialects of Graso 37 Vemdalen and Arjeplog 38 In Graso preaspiration is blocked in certain environments such as an s following the fortis consonant 39 or a morpheme boundary between the vowel and the consonant 33 while it is a general feature of fortis medial consonants in Central Standard Swedish 33 When not preaspirated medial and final fortis stops are simply unaspirated 40 In clusters of fortis stops the second presonorant stop is unaspirated and the former patterns with other medial final stops that is it is either unaspirated or is preaspirated 41 The phonetic attributes of preaspiration also vary In the Swedish of Stockholm preaspiration is often realized as a fricative subject to the character of surrounding vowels or consonants so that it may be labial velar or dental it may also surface as extra length of the preceding vowel 42 In the province of Harjedalen though it resembles h or x 42 The duration of preaspiration is highest in the dialects of Vemdalen and Arjeplog 43 Helgason notes that preaspiration is longer after short vowels in lexically stressed syllables as well as in pre pausal position 31 44 Fricatives edit Phoneme Examplef fuːt fot foot s suːt sot soot ɕ ɕuːl kjol skirt ɧ ɧuːk sjok chunk h huːt hot threat s is dental s in Central Standard Swedish 45 46 but retracted alveolar s in Blekinge 47 Bohuslan 47 Halland 47 and Scania 47 The Swedish fricatives ɕ and ɧ are often considered to be the most difficult aspects of Swedish pronunciation for foreign students The combination of occasionally similar and rather unusual sounds as well as the large variety of partly overlapping allophones of ɧ often presents difficulties for non natives in telling the two apart The existence of a third sibilant in the form of s tends to confuse matters even more and in some cases realizations that are labiodental can also be confused with f In Finland Swedish ɕ is an affricate t ɕ or t ʃ 29 The Swedish phoneme ɧ the sje sound or voiceless postalveolar velar fricative and its alleged coarticulation is a difficult and complex issue debated amongst phoneticians 48 Though the acoustic properties of its ɧ allophones are fairly similar the realizations can vary considerably according to geography age gender as well as social context and are notoriously difficult to describe and transcribe accurately Most common are various sh like sounds with ʂ occurring mainly in northern Sweden and ɕ in Finland A voiceless uvular fricative x can sometimes be used in the varieties influenced by major immigrant languages like Arabic and Kurdish The different realizations can be divided roughly into the following categories 49 Dark sounds x commonly used in the Southern Standard Swedish Some of the varieties specific but not exclusive to areas with a larger immigrant population that commonly realizes the phoneme as a voiceless uvular fricative x Light sounds ʂ used in the northern varieties and ʃ and ɕ or something in between in Finland Swedish Combination of light and dark darker sounds are used as morpheme initials preceding stressed vowels sjuk sick station station while the lighter sounds are used before unstressed vowels and at the end of morphemes bagage baggage dusch shower Sonorants edit Phoneme Examplem muːd mod courage n nuːd nod node ŋ lɔŋ lang long r ruːv rov prey l luːv lov tack v voːt vat wet j juːrd jord earth r has distinct variations in Standard Swedish For most speakers the realization as an alveolar trill occurs only in contexts where emphatic stress is used citation needed In Central Swedish it is often pronounced as a fricative transcribed as ʐ 50 or approximant transcribed as ɹ 7 which is especially frequent in weakly articulated positions such as word finally 29 and somewhat less frequent in stressed syllable onsets in particular after other consonants 50 It may also be an apico alveolar tap 29 One of the most distinct features of the southern varieties is the uvular realization of r which may be a trill ʀ 51 a fricative ʁ or an approximant ʁ In Finland r is usually an apical trill r and may be an approximant ɹ postvocalically 52 Examples of retroflexion 53 input output glossInflection fœrt fœ ːʈ fort brought sup fœrs fœ ːʂ fors is brought passDerivation fœrˈtɑːl fœ ˈʈʰɑːl fortal slander fœrˈsɔrj fœ ˈʂɔrj forsorg taking care Compounds ˈfœ rˌtʉːr ˈfœ ːˌʈʰʉːr fortur priority ˈfœ rˌsɑːl ˈfœ ːˌʂɑːl forsal antechamber Across words fœr ˈtɵn fœ ˈʈʰɵnː for tunn too thin fœr ˈseːn fœ ˈʂeːn for sen too late In most varieties of Swedish that use an alveolar r in particular the central and northern forms the combination of r with dental consonants t d n l s produces retroflex consonant realizations ʈ ɖ ɳ ɭ ʂ a recursive sandhi process called retroflexion 54 55 Thus ˈkɑ ːrta map is realized as kʰɑ ːʈa nuːrd north as nuːɖ ˈvɛ ːnern Vanern as ˈvɛ ːnɛɳ and fɛrsk fresh as faeʂːk The combination of r and l does not uniformly cause retroflexion so that it may also be pronounced with two separate consonants rl and even occasionally in a few words and expressions as a mere l Thus sorl murmur may be pronounced soːɭ but also soːrl 56 In Gothenburg and neighbouring areas such as Molndal and Kungalv the retroflex consonants are substituted by alveolar ones with their effects still remaining For example kvɑːrn is kvɑːn not kvɑːɳ hoːrd is hoːd not hoːɖ However rs unlike what many other Swedes believe is not s but ʃ i e fɛrs is faeʃː not faesː citation needed As the adjacent table shows this process is not limited by word boundaries though there is still some sensitivity to the type of boundary between the r and the dental in that retroflexion is less likely with boundaries higher up in the prosodic hierarchy 57 In the southern varieties which use a uvular r 58 retroflex realizations do not occur 59 For example ˈkɑ ːrta map is realized as ˈkʰɑ ʁta note that Tone 2 in Malmo sounds like Tone 1 in Stockholm etc 60 An r spelled rr usually will not trigger retroflexion so that sparrnat ˈspae rˌnɛːt anti sub net is pronounced ˈspae rːˌnɛːt 61 The process of retroflexion is not limited to just one dental and e g forst is pronounced fœ ʂʈ 59 Retroflexion also does not usually occur in Finland 62 63 Variations of l are not as common though some phonetic variation exists such as a retroflex flap ɽ that exists as an allophone in proximity to a labial or velar consonant e g glad glad or after most long vowels 64 In casual speech the nasals tend to assimilate to the place of articulation of a following obstruent so that for example han kom he came is pronounced haŋ ˈkʰɔmː 65 v and j are pronounced with weak friction and function phonotactically with the sonorants 59 Stress and pitch editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Map of the major tonal dialects of Norwegian and Swedish from Riad 2014 Dark areas have a low tone in accent 2 whereas the light areas have a high tone in accent 2 The isogloss marks the boundary between connective and non connective dialects East and north of it all of the compounds get accent 2 whereas west and south of the isogloss compounds vary in accent As in English there are many Swedish word pairs that are differentiated by stress formel ˈfɔ rmɛl formula formell fɔrˈmɛl formal Stressed syllables carry one of two different tones often described as pitch accents or tonal word accents by Scandinavian linguists 66 67 68 They are called acute and grave accent accent 1 and accent 2 The actual realization of these two tones varies from dialect to dialect 69 In the central Swedish dialect of Stockholm accent 1 is characterized by a low tone at the beginning of the stressed syllable fisken the fish and accent 2 by a high tone at the beginning of the stressed syllable matta mat 67 When the word is in a prominent focused position a high tone often occurs following the word accent fi sken In accent 2 words this results in two high tones within the word e g matta hence the term two peaked for this dialect In southern Swedish a one peaked dialect accent 1 is realized as a high tone at the beginning of the stressed syllable fisken and accent 2 by a low tone matta 69 Generally the grave accent is characterized by a later timing of the word accent pattern as compared with the acute accent 67 The phonemicity of this tonal system is demonstrated in the nearly 300 pairs of two syllable words differentiated only by their use of either grave or acute accent Outside of these pairs the main tendency for tone is that the acute accent appears in monosyllables since the grave accent cannot appear in monosyllabic words while the grave accent appears in polysyllabic words 70 Polysyllabic forms resulting from declension or derivation also tend to have a grave accent except when it is the definite article that is added This tonal distinction has been present in Scandinavian dialects at least since Old Norse though a greater number of polysyllables now have an acute accent These are mostly words that were monosyllabic in Old Norse but have subsequently become disyllabic as have many loanwords 71 For example Old Norse komr comes has become kommer in Swedish with an acute accent 70 The distinction can be shown with the minimal pair anden the mallard tone 1 and anden the spirit tone 2 nbsp Anden anden source source A Central Swedish realization of the difference between acute single and grave double accents Problems playing this file See media help Acute accent ˈǎnden realized ˈa ndɛ n ˈan dɛn the mallard from and mallard In Central Swedish this is a high slightly falling tone followed by a low tone that is a single drop from high to low pitch spread over two syllables Grave accent ˈanden realized ˈa ndɛ n ˈan dɛn the spirit from ande spirit In Central Swedish a mid falling tone followed by a high falling tone that is a double falling tone The exact realization of the tones also depends on the syllable s position in an utterance For instance at the beginning of an utterance the acute accent may have a rising rather than slightly falling pitch on the first syllable Also these are word tones that are spread across the syllables of the word In trisyllabic words with the grave accent the second fall in pitch is distributed across the second and third syllables Grave accent trisyllable flickorna ˈflɪ kʊɳa realized ˈflɪ kːʊ ɳa ˈflɪ kːʊ ɳa the girls The position of the tone is dependent upon stress The first stressed syllable has a high or falling tone as does the following syllable s in grave accented words In most Finland Swedish varieties however the distinction between grave and acute accent is missing A reasonably complete list of uncontroversial so called minimal pairs can be seen below 72 circular reference The two words in each pair are distinguished solely by having different tone acute vs grave In those cases where both words are nouns it would have been possible to list the genitive forms of the words as well thereby creating another word pair but this has been avoided A few word pairs where one of the words is a plural form with the suffix or have been included This is due to the fact that many Swedish speakers in all parts of Sweden pronounce the suffix or the same way as er citation needed Acute accent accent I Grave accent accent II Translation acute Translation graveakter akter stern of boat ship actsalmen allman the elm public generalA na ana the As suspectanden anden the mallard the spiritbacken backen the reverse gear the crate the slopebalen balen the ball dance event the nestballen ballen the bulb on horse the dick slang for penis B na bena the Bs parting hair binder bindor binds sanitary towelsbiten biten the piece bittenboken boken the book overripe spoilt of fruit bona bona the nests polishbonas bonas the nests genitive of bona be polished passive of bona borsten borsten the bristles the brush the broombrassen brassen the brace sailing the Brazilianbreven brevvan the letters pen palbrister brister breaks present tense of brista flawsbrunnen brunnen the well burnt past participle of brinna brynen brynen the edges of for example forest whetstonesbrynet brynet the edge of for example forest the whetstoneburen buren the cage carried past participle of bara busen busen the pranks the hooligandragen dragen the trolling spoons drawn past participle of dra tipsydraget draget the draught the trolling spoon drawn past participle of dra drivet drivet the speed the energy drifted driven past participle of driva E na ena the Es unite unifyEnar enar male name junipersfallen fallen the falls fallen past participle of falla fallet fallet the fall fallen past participle of falla faster fester fastens partiesfisken fisken the fish acts of fishingF en FN the Fs The UNfonen fanen the phone in phonetics the idiotfangen fangen the armfuls the prisonerfanget fanget the armful caught past particple of fanga fallen fallen the rug places where trees have been felledfaller fallor fells cuts down traps plural of the noun falla festen fasten the party the feast places where something has been attachedforen foren the bow on ship boat conditions of the ground for travelling plural of fore forut forut towards the bow on ship boat before earliergifter gifter marries poisons plural of gift giftet giftet the poison the marriageJ na gina the Js tackle sailing take a shortcutgiven given the deal in card games givenljusen gjusen the candles the ospreygripen gripen the griffin grabbed gripped past participle of gripa gangen gangen the walkway gone past participle of ga heden heden the heath heathen adjective hinner hinnor has the time to do something coatingshuggen huggen the cuts made with a heavy object like an axe chopped past participle of hugga hallen hallen the directions held past participle of halla hallet hallet the direction held past participle of halla H na hana the Hs mock taunthogre hogre higher the man to the right as in den hogre iden iden the ide bears dens for hibernationI na Ina the Is female nameinfor infor ahead of in front of introduces introduce present tense or imperative of infora ljuden juden the sounds the Jewkaraten karaten the carat the karatekatten katten the cat a profanity as in for example Katten ocksa knallen knallen the bang the small hill the pedlarknuten knuten the knot tied past participle of knyta kubben kubben the bowler hat the chopping block for wood kullen kullen the litter group of newborn animals the hillkaren karen the corps the breezelaven laven the lichen the headframeleder leder leads present tense of leda joints anatomy lumpen lumpen the military service contemptible lousymalen malen the moth ground milled past participle of mala mjolken mjolken the milk the fish seedmodet modet the courage the fashionmoppen moppen the mop the mopednamnen namnen the names the namesakenormen norrman the norm Norwegiansnubben nubben the tack the shot alcohol nyper nypor pinches present tense of nypa Grips made with the thumb against one or more of the other fingers plural noun Oden oden name of a Norse God odesoret oratt the mite injusticepacken packen the rabble definite plural of pack the balepajas pajas clown be destroyed passive of paja panter panter panther depositsperser parser Persians ordealsPolen palen Poland the pole thick wooden stick pollen pallen pollen the horseyradar radar radar present tense of rada as in rada upp list something raster raster grid breaks in school or at a workplace i e for example coffee breaks regel regel rule latchreser resor travels present tense of resa journeys tripsrivet rivet the melee the fighting tornroller roller cylinder that rotates and is used for painting rolesruter rutor diamonds in card games squares window panesrutten rutten the route rottenragen ragen the rye the overmeasurerana rana the nymphs robracken racken the horizontal bars gymnastics railingsracket racket the horizontal bar gymnastics the railingranner rannor runs chutessabbat sabbat sabbath destroyed sabotaged past participle of sabba ceder seder cedar customs traditions C na sena the Cs late plural of sen sinewcider sidor cider pagessikten sikten the view sights on rifles plural of sikte skallen skallen the barks dog sounds the skullskeden skeden the spoon stages of time skiftet skiftet the shift the changeskiften skiften the shifts changesskjuten skjuten the ejaculations shot past participle of skjuta skjutet skjutet the speed the ejaculation shot past participle of skjuta skotten skotten the shots the Scotsmanskuren skuren the rain shower cut past participle of skara skytten skytten the gunner acts of shootingslagen slagen the battles the hits beatenslaget slaget the battle the hit beatenslitet slitet the toil wornsluten sluten the ends closed past participle of sluta slutet slutet the end closed past participle of sluta slakten slakten the extended family genera biology snuten snuten the cop past participle of snyta blow one s nose zoona sona the zoos expiatespaden spaden the stocks cooking the spadespana spana the spas watch observe searchspricker sprickor bursts cracks present tense of the verb spricka cracks plural of the noun spricka stegen stegen the steps the ladderstrider strider fights present tense of strida fights battles plural of the noun strid straken straken the moving patches bands of something the bow for a violin stubben stubben the stubble the tree stumpstallen stallen the racks places locations stallet stallet the rack the placesugen sugen the sucking device sucked past participle of suga in the mood for somethingsuget suget the urge sucked past participle of suga in the mood for somethingsaden saden the seed the grain things intended for sowing plural of sade cellen sallen the cell the brutetagen tagen the grips takentaget taget the grip takentanken tanken the tank the thoughttoner toner toner tonestraven traven the trot the pile the stacktomten tomten the plot of land Santa Claus the gnometummen tummen the inch the thumbtecken tacken sign bed coversudden udden the point the cusp the headlanduppfor uppfor uphill present tense or imperative of uppfora set up a theatre play behave utfor utfor downhill present tense or imperative of utfora carry out vaken vaken the hole in the ice awakevalen valen the whale stiff numbvanten vanten the shrouds sailing the mittenvasen vasen the vase the bundle of brushwoodviken viken the bay folded past participle of vika viner viner makes a whistling sound of for example wind winesvreden vreden the knobs the rage the wrathvarden varlden varden the host the world valuesOskar askar male name present tense of aska thunder oren oren the gravel pennies plural of the monetary unit ore used when no numeral immediately precedes the word oret oret the gravel the penny 1 100 of a Swedish krona Note that karaten karaten is the only pair with more than two syllables although we would get a second one if we used the definite forms of the pair perser parser i e perserna parserna The word pair lander countries plural of land and lander loins plural of land could have been included but this one is controversial 73 circular reference For those speakers who have grave accent in the plural of land the definite plural forms will also constitute a three syllable minimal pair landerna acute accent the countries vs landerna grave accent the loins Although examples with more than two syllables are very few in Standard Swedish it is possible to find other three syllable pairs in regional dialects such as Varmlandska hunnera acute the Huns vs hunnera grave the dogs andera annera acute the mallards vs andera annera grave the ends etc Prosody in Swedish often varies substantially between different dialects including the spoken varieties of Standard Swedish As in most languages stress can be applied to emphasize certain words in a sentence To some degree prosody may indicate questions although less so than in English Phonotactics editAt a minimum a stressed syllable must consist of either a long vowel or a short vowel and a long consonant 74 Like many other Germanic languages Swedish has a tendency for closed syllables with a relatively large number of consonant clusters in initial as well as final position Though not as complex as that of most Slavic languages examples of up to 7 consecutive consonants can occur when adding Swedish inflections to some foreign loanwords or names and especially when combined with the tendency of Swedish to make long compound nouns The syllable structure of Swedish can therefore be described with the following formula C C C V C C C This means that a Swedish one syllable morpheme can have up to three consonants preceding the vowel that forms the nucleus of the syllable and three consonants following it Examples skramts skrɛmts verb scare past participle passive voice or sprangts sprɛŋts verb explode past participle passive voice All but one of the consonant phonemes ŋ can occur at the beginning of a morpheme though there are only 6 possible three consonant combinations all of which begin with s and a total of 31 initial two consonant combinations All consonants except for h and ɕ can occur finally and the total number of possible final two consonant clusters is 62 In some cases this can result in very complex combinations such as in vastkustskt ˈvɛ stˌkɵstskt consisting of vastkust west coast with the adjective suffix sk and the neuter suffix t 75 Central Standard Swedish and most other Swedish dialects feature a rare complementary quantity feature 76 wherein a phonologically short consonant follows a long vowel and a long consonant follows a short vowel this is true only for stressed syllables and all segments are short in unstressed syllables 34 37 This arose from the historical shift away from a system with a four way contrast that is VːCː VC VːC and VCː were all possible inherited from Proto Germanic to a three way one VC VːC and VCː and finally the present two way one certain Swedish dialects have not undergone these shifts and exhibit one of the other two phonotactic systems instead 77 In literature on Swedish phonology there are a number of ways to transcribe complementary relationship including 78 A length mark ː for either the vowel viːt 79 or the consonant vitː 80 Gemination of the consonant vit vs vitt Diphthongization of the vowel vijt vs vit The position of the stress marker viˈt vs vitˈ With the conventional assumption that medial long consonants are ambisyllabic that is penna pen is syllabified as ˈpɛ n na all stressed syllables are thus heavy 78 In unstressed syllables the distinction is lost between u and o or between e ɛ 29 With each successive post stress syllable the number of contrasting vowels decreases gradually with distance from the point of stress at three syllables from stress only a and ɛ occur 75 Sample edit nbsp The North Wind and the Sun source source track track A 25 year old male reads out The North Wind and the Sun in a dialect of Central Standard Swedish specific to Stockholm Problems playing this file See media help The sample text is a reading of The North Wind and the Sun The transcriptions are based on the section on Swedish found in The Handbook on the International Phonetic Association in which a man in his forties from Stockholm is recorded reading out the traditional fable in a manner typical of Central Standard Swedish as spoken in his area The broad transcription is phonemic while the narrow is phonetic 81 Broad transcription edit nuːrdanvɪndɛn ɔ suːlɛn tvɪstadɛ ɛn ɡɔŋː ɔm vɛm ɑːv dɔm sɔm vɑːr starkast jɵst doː kɔm ɛn vandrarɛ vɛːɡɛn fram ɪnsveːpt iː ɛn varm kapːa dɔm kɔm doː oːvɛrɛns ɔm at dɛn sɔm fœrst kɵndɛ foː vandrarɛn at ta ɑːv sɛj kapːan han skɵlːɛ anseːs vɑːra starkarɛ ɛn dɛn andra doː bloːstɛ nuːrdanvɪndɛn sɔ hoːrt han nɔnsɪn kɵndɛ mɛn jʉː hoːrdarɛ han bloːstɛ dɛstʊ tɛːtarɛ sveːptɛ vandrarɛn kapːan ɔm sɛj ɔ tɪl slʉːt ɡɑːv nuːrdanvɪndɛn ɵpː fœrsoːkɛt doː lɛːt suːlɛn siːna stroːlar ɧiːna heːlt varmt ɔ jeːnast tuːɡ vandrarɛn ɑːv sɛj kapːan ɔ soː vɑːr nuːrdanvɪndɛn tvɵŋɛn at eːrɕɛnːa at suːlɛn vɑːr dɛn starkastɛ ɑːv dɔm tvoː Narrow transcription edit ˈnuːɖaɱˌvɪnˑdɛn ɔ ˈsuːlɛn ˈtv ɪsːtadɛ ɛŋ ˈɡɔŋː ɔɱ ˈvɛmˑ ɑv ˌdɔm sɔɱ vɑˑ ˈstaɹːcast ˈʝɵsˑt ˈd oː kʰɔm ɛɱ ˈvanːdɾaɾɛ ˈvɛːɡeɱ fɾam ˈɪnˌsv ee pt iˑ ɛɱ vaɹˑm ˈcʰapːa dɔm kʰɔm doˑ oe vɛˈɾɛnːs ˈɔmˑ at dɛn sɔm ˈfɵʂːʈ kʰɵnˑdɛ foˑ ˈvanːdɹ aɹɛn at ˈtʰɑː ɑˑv sɛj ˈcʰapːan hanˑ skɵlˑɛ ˈanːˌseːs vɑˑ ˈstaɹːcaɾɛ ɛn dɛn ˈandɾa doː ˈbloe stɛ ˈnuːɖaɱˌvɪnˑdɛn soˑ ˈhoːʈ han ˈnɔnːˌsɪŋ ˈkʰɵnːdɛ mɛɳ ʝʉˑ ˈhoːɖaɾɛ ham ˈbloe stɛ dɛsˑtʊ ˈtʰɛːtaɾɛ ˈsv ee ptɛ ˈvanːdɹ aɹɛŋ ˈcʰapːan ˈɔmˑ sɛj ɔ tʰɪl ˈslʉːt ɡɑˑv ˈnuːɖaɱˌvɪnˑdɛn ˈɵpː fœ ˈʂoe cɛt doˑ lɛˑt ˈsuːlɛn siˑna ˈstɾoːlaɹ ˈɧiːna heˑlt ˈvaɹːmt ɔ ˈʝeːnast tʰuˑɡ ˈvanːdɹ aɹɛn ˈɑːv sɛj ˈcʰapːan ɔ soˑ vɑˑ ˈnuːɖaɱˌvɪnˑdɛn ˈtvɵŋːɛn at ˈeːɹˌɕɛnːa at ˈsuːlɛn vɑˑ dɛn ˈstaɹːcastɛ ɑˑv dɔm ˈtv oː Orthographic version edit Nordanvinden och solen tvistade en gang om vem av dem som var starkast Just da kom en vandrare vagen fram insvept i en varm kappa De kom da overens om att den som forst kunde fa vandraren att ta av sig kappan han skulle anses vara starkare an den andra Da blaste nordanvinden sa hart han nagonsin kunde men ju hardare han blaste desto tatare svepte vandraren kappan om sig och till slut gav nordanvinden upp forsoket Da lat solen sina stralar skina helt varmt och genast tog vandraren av sig kappan och sa var nordanvinden tvungen att erkanna att solen var den starkaste av de tva Notes edit a b c Andersson 2002 p 272 Schaeffler 2005 p 26 citing Elert 1964 Garding 1974 and Bannert 1976 Schaeffler 2005 pp 7 8 a b c Engstrand 1999 p 140 Thoren amp Petterson 1992 p 15 a b Ladefoged amp Maddieson 1996 pp 295 6 a b c d e f Engstrand 1999 p 141 Elmquist 1915 p 31 Thoren amp Petterson 1992 pp 11 2 14 5 17 8 a b Riad 2014 p 27 Elmquist 1915 p 33 Thoren amp Petterson 1992 pp 8 11 13 4 16 7 Eliasson 1986 p 273 Thoren amp Petterson 1992 pp 13 5 a b c d e Riad 2014 p 38 Engstrand 2004 pp 115 6 Riad 2014 pp 29 38 9 Riad 2014 pp 22 48 9 Fant 1983 p 2 a b Riad 2014 pp 35 6 Ladefoged amp Maddieson 1996 p 292 The symbols i and e used in the original citation were changed to iː and eː to keep this article consistent Cited in Schaeffler 2005 p 8 McAllister Lubker amp Carlson 1974 cited in Ladefoged amp Maddieson 1996 p 295 Elert 2000 pp 38 43 Table adapted from Engstrand 2004 p 167 Riad 2014 pp 46 67 Riad 2014 pp 46 58 a b Riad 2014 p 46 a b c d e Andersson 2002 p 273 a b Ringen amp Suomi 2012 a b Helgason 1998 p 53 Ringen amp Helgason 2004 p 56 a b c Helgason 1999a p 80 a b Tronnier 2002 p 33 Helgason 1999b p 1851 Helgason 1999b p 1854 a b Wretling Strangert amp Schaeffler 2002 p 703 citing Helgason 1999a Wretling Strangert amp Schaeffler 2002 p 706 Helgason 1999b p 1853 Ringen amp Helgason 2004 p 59 Petrova et al 2006 p 20 citing Ringen amp Helgason 2004 a b Liberman 1978 pp 64ff Wretling Strangert amp Schaeffler 2002 p 704 Helgason 1999b pp 1852 3 Engstrand 1999 pp 140 1 Engstrand 2004 p 167 a b c d Adams 1975 p 289 Ladefoged amp Maddieson 1996 pp 171 2 329 30 Garlen 1988 pp 71 2 a b Elert 2000 Ladefoged amp Maddieson 1996 pp 225 6 Riad 2014 pp 68 75 Table modified from Hamann 2003 p 84 citing Eliasson 1986 Eliasson 1986 pp 278 9 Postalveolarization and supradentalization are also common terms Eliasson 1986 p 279 Hamann 2003 p 84 citing Eliasson 1986 p 282 Those south of Kalmar Jonkoping and Falkenberg a little north of these cities a uvular rhotic appears in initial position and as a long consonant Andersson 2002 p 273 a b c Andersson 2002 p 274 Garlen 1988 pp 73 4 Eliasson 1986 p 281 Riad 2014 p 73 Reuter 1992 p 108 Andersson 2002 pp 273 4 Eliasson 1986 p 276 Garding 1974 a b c Bruce 1977 Riad 2014 a b Bruce 2010 a b Liberman 1982 p 13 Engstrand 2004 pp 186 90 Translated from a Swedish only Wikipedia article From the Discussion section of the Swedish article Schaeffler 2005 p 7 a b Garlen 1988 pp 101 14 Schaeffler 2005 p 9 Schaeffler 2005 p 39 a b Schaeffler 2005 p 8 citing Elert 1964 E g Elert 1964 p 43 E g Eliasson amp La Pelle 1973 and Riad 1992 Engstrand 1999 pp 140 2 References editAdams Douglas Q 1975 The Distribution of Retracted Sibilants in Medieval Europe Language Linguistic Society of America 51 2 282 292 doi 10 2307 412855 JSTOR 412855 Andersson Erik 2002 Swedish in Konig Ekkehard van der Auwera Johan eds The Germanic Languages Routledge language family descriptions Routledge pp 271 312 ISBN 0 415 28079 6 Bannert R 1976 Mittelbayerische Phonologie auf Akustischer und Perzeptorischer Grundlage Lund Gleerup Bruce Gosta 1977 Swedish Word Accents in Sentence Perspective PDF Liber ISBN 91 40 04589 7 Bruce Gosta 2010 Var fonetiska geografi Studentlitteratur ISBN 9789144050539 Elert Claes Christian 1964 Phonologic Studies of Quantity in Swedish Uppsala Almqvist amp Wiksell Elert Claes Christian 2000 Allman och svensk fonetik in Swedish 8th ed Stockholm Norstedts ISBN 91 1 300939 7 Eliasson Stig 1986 Sandhi in Peninsular Scandinavian in Anderson Henning ed Sandhi Phenomena in the Languages of Europe Berlin de Gruyter pp 271 300 Eliasson Stig La Pelle N 1973 Generativa regler for svenskans kvantitet Arkiv for nordisk filologi 88 133 148 Elmquist A Louis 1915 Swedish phonology Chicago The Engberg Holmberg Publishing Company Engstrand Olle 1999 Swedish Handbook of the International Phonetic Association A Guide to the usage of the International Phonetic Alphabet Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 140 142 ISBN 0 521 63751 1 Engstrand Olle 2004 Fonetikens grunder in Swedish Lund Studenlitteratur ISBN 91 44 04238 8 Fant G 1983 Feature analysis of Swedish vowels a revisit Speech Music and Hearing Quarterly Progress and Status Report 24 2 3 1 19 Garlen Claes 1988 Svenskans fonologi in Swedish Lund Studenlitteratur ISBN 91 44 28151 X Garding E 1974 Kontrastiv prosodi Lund Gleerup Hamann Silke 2003 The Phonetics and Phonology of Retroflexes Utrecht ISBN 90 76864 39 X a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Helgason Petur 1998 On line preaspiration in Swedish implications for historical sound change Proceedings of Sound Patterns of Spontaneous Speech vol 98 pp 51 54 Helgason Petur 1999a Preaspiration and sonorant devoicing in the Graso dialect preliminary findings Proceedings of the Swedish Phonetics Conference 1999 Gothenburg Papers in Theoretical Linguistics Goteborg University pp 77 80 Helgason Petur 1999b Phonetic preconditions for the development of normative preaspiration Proceedings of the 14th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences San Francisco pp 1851 1854 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ladefoged Peter Maddieson Ian 1996 The Sounds of the World s Languages Oxford Blackwell ISBN 0 631 19815 6 Liberman Anatoly 1978 Pseudo stods in Scandinavian languages Orbis 27 52 76 Liberman Anatoly 1982 Germanic Accentology vol 1 The Scandinavian Languages Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press McAllister Robert Lubker James Carlson Johann 1974 An EMG study of some characteristics of the Swedish rounded vowels Journal of Phonetics 2 4 267 278 doi 10 1016 S0095 4470 19 31297 5 Petrova Olga Plapp Rosemary Ringen Ringen Szentgyorgyi Szilard 2006 Voice and aspiration Evidence from Russian Hungarian German Swedish and Turkish The Linguistic Review 23 1 35 doi 10 1515 tlr 2006 001 S2CID 42712078 Reuter Mikael 1992 Swedish as a pluricentric language in Clyne Michael ed Pluricentric Languages Differing Norms in Different Nations Berlin Mouton de Gruyter pp 101 116 Riad Tomas 1992 Structures in Germanic Prosody Department of Scandinavian Languages Stockholm University Riad Tomas 2006 Scandinavian accent typology PDF STUF Sprachtypologie und Universalienforschung 59 1 36 55 doi 10 1524 stuf 2006 59 1 36 S2CID 120424722 archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 08 Riad Tomas 2014 The Phonology of Swedish Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954357 1 Ringen Catherine Helgason Petur 2004 Distinctive voice does not imply regressive assimilation evidence from Swedish International Journal of English Studies Advances in Optimality Theory 4 2 53 71 Ringen Catherine Suomi Katri 2012 The voicing contrast in Fenno Swedish stops Journal of Phonetics 40 3 419 429 doi 10 1016 j wocn 2012 02 010 Schaeffler Felix 2005 Phonological Quantity in Swedish Dialects Phonum 10 Thoren Bosse Petterson Nils Owe 1992 Svenska Utifran Uttalsanvisningar Svenska institutet ISBN 91 520 0284 5 Thoren Bosse 1997 Swedish prosody Tronnier Mechtild 2002 Preaspiration in Southern Swedish dialects Proceedings of Fonetik 44 1 33 36 Wretling P Strangert E Schaeffler F 2002 Quantity and Preaspiration in Northern Swedish Dialects in Bel B Marlien I eds Proceedings of the Speech Prosody 2002 conference Aix en Provence Laboratoire Parole et Langage pp 703 706Further reading editBolander Maria 2001 Funktionell svensk grammatik 1st ed Liber AB ISBN 9789147050543 Dahlstedt Karl Hampus 1967 Svarigheter i svenskans uttal Modersmalslararnas forening Garlen Claes 2003 Svenska Spraknamndens Uttalsordbok Svenska Spraknamnden ISBN 978 9172273092 Hedelin Per 1997 Norstedts Svenska Uttalslexikon Norstedts Ordbok ISBN 9789119711229 Kuronen Mikko 2000 Vokaluttalets akustik i sverigesvenska finlandssvenska och finska PDF University of Jyvaskyla ISBN 978 951 39 4093 5 Kuronen Mikko 2001 Acoustic character of vowel pronunciation in Sweden Swedish and Finland Swedish PDF Lund University Department of Linguistics Working Papers 49 94 97 Leinonen Therese 2010 An Acoustic Analysis of Vowel Pronunciation in Swedish Dialects PDF University of Groningen ISBN 978 90 367 4450 8 Lundskaer Nielsen Tom Barnes Michael Lindskog Annika 2005 Introduction to Scandinavian phonetics Danish Norwegian and Swedish Alfabeta ISBN 978 8763600095 Rosenqvist Hakan 2007 Uttalsboken svenskt uttal i praktik och teori Stockholm Natur amp Kultur ISBN 978 91 27 40645 2 Torp Arne 2001 Retroflex consonants and dorsal r mutually excluding innovations On the diffusion of dorsal r in Scandinavian In van de Velde Hans van Hout Roeland eds r atics Brussels Etudes amp Travaux pp 75 90 ISSN 0777 3692 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help External links editIntroduction to Swedish A guide to pronunciation Stockholm School of Economics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Swedish phonology amp oldid 1182856646, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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