SAMPA computer readable phonetic alphabet (original) (raw)

SAMPA

computer readable phonetic alphabet

SAMPA (Speech Assessment Methods Phonetic Alphabet) is a machine-readable phonetic alphabet. It was originally developed under the ESPRIT project 1541, SAM (Speech Assessment Methods) in 1987-89 by an international group of phoneticians, and was applied in the first instance to the European Communities languages Danish,Dutch, English, French, German, and Italian (by 1989); later to Norwegian and Swedish (by 1992); and subsequently to Greek, Portuguese, and Spanish (1993). Under the BABEL project, it has now been extended to Bulgarian, Estonian, Hungarian, Polish, and Romanian (1996). Under the aegis of COCOSDA it is hoped to extend it to cover many other languages (and in principle all languages). On the initiative of the OrienTel project, Arabic, Hebrew, and Turkish have been added. Other recent additions: Cantonese, Croatian, Czech, Russian, Slovenian, Thai. Coming shortly: Japanese, Korean.

Where Unicode (ISO 10646) is not available or not appropriate, SAMPA and the proposed X-SAMPA (Extended SAMPA) constitute the best robust international collaborative basis for a standard machine-readable encoding of phonetic notation.

Note about Unicode: Recent version of the Internet Explorer and Netscape browsers are capable of handling WGL4, the subset of Unicode needed for the orthography of all the languages of Europe. Test yours by looking at this page, or download an up-to-date browser and a WGL4 font. Unicode SAMPA pages are now available with correct local orthography, for those with this capacity, for Bulgarian, Czech, Greek, Hungarian, Polish, Romanian, and Slovenian. See if your browser can cope with Unicode IPA symbols by looking at this special version of the English SAMPA page. For IPA in Unicode, see here.

SAMPA basically consists of a mapping of symbols of the International Phonetic Alphabet onto ASCII codes in the range 33..127, the 7-bit printable ASCII characters. Associated with the coding (mapping) are guidelines for the transcription of the languages to which SAMPA has been applied. Unlike other proposals for mapping the IPA onto ASCII, SAMPA is not one single author's scheme, but represents the outcome of collaboration and consultation among speech researchers in many different countries. The SAMPA transcription symbols have been developed by or in consultation with native speakers of every language to which they have been applied, but are standardized internationally.

A SAMPA transcription is designed to be uniquely parsable. As with the ordinary IPA, a string of SAMPA symbols does not require spaces between successive symbols.

SAMPA has been applied not only by the SAM partners collaborating on EUROM 1, but also in other speech research projects (e.g. BABEL, Onomastica, OrienTel) and by Oxford University Press. It is included among the resources listed by the Linguistic Data Consortium.

In its basic form SAMPA was seen as catering essentially for segmental transcription, particularly of a traditional phonemic or near-phonemic kind. Prosodic notation was not adequately developed. This shortcoming has now been remedied by a proposed parallel system of prosodic notation, SAMPROSA. It is important that prosodic and segmental transcriptions be kept distinct from one another, on separate representational tiers (because certain symbols have different meanings in SAMPROSA from their meaning in SAMPA: e.g. H denotes a labial-palatal semivowel in SAMPA, but High tone in SAMPROSA).

A proposal for an extended version of the segmental alphabet, X-SAMPA, extends the basic agreed conventions so as to make provision for every symbol on the Chart of the International Phonetic Association, including all diacritics. In principle this makes it possible to produce a machine-readable phonetic transcription for every known human language.

The present SAMPA recommendations (as devised for the basic six languages) are set out in the following table. All IPA symbols that coincide with lower-case letters of the Latin alphabet remain the same; all other symbols are recoded within the ASCII range 37..126. In this current WWW document the IPA symbols cannot be shown, but the columns indicate respectively a SAMPA symbol, its ASCII/ANSI number decimal), the shape of the corresponding IPA symbol, the Unicode number (hex, decimal) for the IPA symbol, and the symbol's meaning or use.

SAMPA IPA Unicode label and exemplification
symbol ASCII hex dec.
Vowels
A 65 ɑ script a 0251 593 open back unrounded, Cardinal 5, Eng. start
{ 123 æ ae ligature 00E6 230 near-open front unrounded, Eng. trap
6 54 ɐ turned a 0250 592 open schwa, Ger. besser
Q 81 ɒ turned script a 0252 594 open back rounded, Eng. lot
E 69 ɛ epsilon 025B 603 open-mid front unrounded, C3, Fr. même
@ 64 ə turned e 0259 601 schwa, Eng. banana
3 51 ɜ rev. epsilon 025C 604 long mid central, Eng. nurse
I 73 ɪ small cap I 026A 618 lax close front unrounded, Eng. kit
O 79 ɔ turned c 0254 596 open-mid back rounded, Eng. thought
2 50 ø o-slash 00F8 248 close-mid front rounded, Fr. deux
9 57 œ oe ligature 0153 339 open-mid front rounded, Fr. neuf
& 38 ɶ s.c. OE lig. 0276 630 open front rounded
U 85 ʊ upsilon 028A 650 lax close back rounded, Eng. foot
} 125 ʉ barred u 0289 649 close central rounded, Swedish sju
V 86 ʌ turned v 028C 652 open-mid back unrounded, Eng. strut
Y 89 ʏ small cap Y 028F 655 lax [y], Ger. hübsch
Consonants
B 66 β beta 03B2 946 voiced bilabial fricative, Sp. cabo
C 67 ç c-cedilla 00E7 231 voiceless palatal fricative, Ger. ich
D 68 ð eth 00F0 240 voiced dental fricative, Eng. then
G 71 ɣ gamma 0263 611 voiced velar fricative, Sp. fuego
L 76 ʎ turned y 028E 654 palatal lateral, It. famiglia
J 74 ɲ left-tail n 0272 626 palatal nasal, Sp. año
N 78 ŋ eng 014B 331 velar nasal, Eng. thing
R 82 ʁ inv. s.c. R 0281 641 vd. uvular fric. or trill, Fr. roi
S 83 ʃ esh 0283 643 voiceless palatoalveolar fricative, Eng. ship
T 84 θ theta 03B8 952 voiceless dental fricative, Eng. thin
H 72 ɥ turned h 0265 613 labial-palatal semivowel, Fr. huit
Z 90 ʒ ezh (yogh) 0292 658 vd. palatoalveolar fric., Eng. measure
? 63 ʔ dotless ? 0294 660 glottal stop, Ger. Verein, also Danish stød
Length, stress and tone marks
: 58 ː length mark 02D0 720 length mark
" 34 ˈ vertical stroke 02C8 712 primary stress *
% 37 ˌ low vert. str. 02CC 716 secondary stress
` 96 (see note 1) falling tone
' 39 (see note 1) rising tone
Note 1: The SAMPA tone mark recommendations were based on the IPA as it was up to 1989-90. Since then, however, the IPA has changed its symbols for falling and rising tones. These SAMPA tone marks may now be considered obsolete, having in practice been superseded by the SAMPROSA proposals.
Diacritics (shown with another symbol as an example)
=n 60 ̩ inf. stroke 0329 809 syllabic consonant, Eng. garden (see note 2)
O~ 126 ̃ sup. tilde 0303 771 nasalization, Fr. bon
Note 2: At the time SAMPA was established it was assumed that the syllabicity diacritic should precede the base character. More recently, ISO and Unicode have established that all diacritics should follow the base character, and this principle should be applied in future work.

The phonemic notation of individual languages

These pages provide a brief outline of the phonemic distinctions in various languages:Arabic,Bulgarian, Cantonese, Czech,Croatian,Danish,Dutch, English, Estonian, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian,Russian,Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish.

Extensions

These pages provide extensions of the basic segmental SAMPA: SAMPROSA (prosodic), X-SAMPA (other symbols, mainly segmental).

UCL Phonetics and Linguistics home page, University College London home page.

A utility: Instant IPA in Word - converts SAMPA to IPA.

To refer to SAMPA cite this website (www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/sampa) or the printed version
[Wells, J.C.], 1997. 'SAMPA computer readable phonetic alphabet'. In Gibbon, D., Moore, R. and Winski, R. (eds.), 1997. Handbook of Standards and Resources for Spoken Language Systems. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter. Part IV, section B.

For queries please contact: John Wells by e-mail or at

Department of Phonetics and Linguistics, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT. Tel. +44 171 380 7175

Last revised 2005 October 25