Where and when to pronounce O as A and when to pronounce it as O?
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Is there any rule of thumb of where and when to pronounce O (in Ukrainian words) as /a/ and when to pronounce it as /o/?
Is it supposed to be like in Russian language?
фонетика
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up vote
8
down vote
favorite
Is there any rule of thumb of where and when to pronounce O (in Ukrainian words) as /a/ and when to pronounce it as /o/?
Is it supposed to be like in Russian language?
фонетика
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
favorite
up vote
8
down vote
favorite
Is there any rule of thumb of where and when to pronounce O (in Ukrainian words) as /a/ and when to pronounce it as /o/?
Is it supposed to be like in Russian language?
фонетика
Is there any rule of thumb of where and when to pronounce O (in Ukrainian words) as /a/ and when to pronounce it as /o/?
Is it supposed to be like in Russian language?
фонетика
фонетика
asked Nov 29 at 11:04
Ubiquitous Student
23318
23318
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add a comment |
1 Answer
1
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up vote
11
down vote
In Ukrainian you simply pronounce о
as /ɔ/ and а
as /ɑ/ (they are almost never intermixed).
It's true that in unstressed position vowels can be pronounced less clear than in stressed position. The most prominent example is е
/ɛ/ and и
/ɪ/, which both can approach [e] (so, when recovering written form from the oral form, you sometimes are unsure whether you should write е
or и
in unstressed position). Other vowels also may somewhat "deviate" when in unstressed position (e.g. а
/ɑ/ → [ɐ], о
/ɔ/ → [o], у
/u/ → [ʊ]). But а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ "deviate" much less than in Russian, from a practical point of view you can think that а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ don't "deviate" at all.
Some English soruces:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_phonology#Vowels
1
I would lile to add, that o is mostly can be like u, but not a in those cases. Especially when we speak about West and North Ukrainian.
– follower
Nov 29 at 12:27
1
The sound of “о”, when followed by stressed “у”, can also deviate somewhat towards /u/ in words like “кожу́х”. Still, a learner would do well pronouncing everything as written.
– Roman Odaisky
Nov 30 at 1:33
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
11
down vote
In Ukrainian you simply pronounce о
as /ɔ/ and а
as /ɑ/ (they are almost never intermixed).
It's true that in unstressed position vowels can be pronounced less clear than in stressed position. The most prominent example is е
/ɛ/ and и
/ɪ/, which both can approach [e] (so, when recovering written form from the oral form, you sometimes are unsure whether you should write е
or и
in unstressed position). Other vowels also may somewhat "deviate" when in unstressed position (e.g. а
/ɑ/ → [ɐ], о
/ɔ/ → [o], у
/u/ → [ʊ]). But а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ "deviate" much less than in Russian, from a practical point of view you can think that а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ don't "deviate" at all.
Some English soruces:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_phonology#Vowels
1
I would lile to add, that o is mostly can be like u, but not a in those cases. Especially when we speak about West and North Ukrainian.
– follower
Nov 29 at 12:27
1
The sound of “о”, when followed by stressed “у”, can also deviate somewhat towards /u/ in words like “кожу́х”. Still, a learner would do well pronouncing everything as written.
– Roman Odaisky
Nov 30 at 1:33
add a comment |
up vote
11
down vote
In Ukrainian you simply pronounce о
as /ɔ/ and а
as /ɑ/ (they are almost never intermixed).
It's true that in unstressed position vowels can be pronounced less clear than in stressed position. The most prominent example is е
/ɛ/ and и
/ɪ/, which both can approach [e] (so, when recovering written form from the oral form, you sometimes are unsure whether you should write е
or и
in unstressed position). Other vowels also may somewhat "deviate" when in unstressed position (e.g. а
/ɑ/ → [ɐ], о
/ɔ/ → [o], у
/u/ → [ʊ]). But а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ "deviate" much less than in Russian, from a practical point of view you can think that а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ don't "deviate" at all.
Some English soruces:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_phonology#Vowels
1
I would lile to add, that o is mostly can be like u, but not a in those cases. Especially when we speak about West and North Ukrainian.
– follower
Nov 29 at 12:27
1
The sound of “о”, when followed by stressed “у”, can also deviate somewhat towards /u/ in words like “кожу́х”. Still, a learner would do well pronouncing everything as written.
– Roman Odaisky
Nov 30 at 1:33
add a comment |
up vote
11
down vote
up vote
11
down vote
In Ukrainian you simply pronounce о
as /ɔ/ and а
as /ɑ/ (they are almost never intermixed).
It's true that in unstressed position vowels can be pronounced less clear than in stressed position. The most prominent example is е
/ɛ/ and и
/ɪ/, which both can approach [e] (so, when recovering written form from the oral form, you sometimes are unsure whether you should write е
or и
in unstressed position). Other vowels also may somewhat "deviate" when in unstressed position (e.g. а
/ɑ/ → [ɐ], о
/ɔ/ → [o], у
/u/ → [ʊ]). But а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ "deviate" much less than in Russian, from a practical point of view you can think that а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ don't "deviate" at all.
Some English soruces:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_phonology#Vowels
In Ukrainian you simply pronounce о
as /ɔ/ and а
as /ɑ/ (they are almost never intermixed).
It's true that in unstressed position vowels can be pronounced less clear than in stressed position. The most prominent example is е
/ɛ/ and и
/ɪ/, which both can approach [e] (so, when recovering written form from the oral form, you sometimes are unsure whether you should write е
or и
in unstressed position). Other vowels also may somewhat "deviate" when in unstressed position (e.g. а
/ɑ/ → [ɐ], о
/ɔ/ → [o], у
/u/ → [ʊ]). But а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ "deviate" much less than in Russian, from a practical point of view you can think that а
/ɑ/ and о
/ɔ/ don't "deviate" at all.
Some English soruces:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_phonology#Vowels
answered Nov 29 at 12:16
Sasha♦
17.3k229103
17.3k229103
1
I would lile to add, that o is mostly can be like u, but not a in those cases. Especially when we speak about West and North Ukrainian.
– follower
Nov 29 at 12:27
1
The sound of “о”, when followed by stressed “у”, can also deviate somewhat towards /u/ in words like “кожу́х”. Still, a learner would do well pronouncing everything as written.
– Roman Odaisky
Nov 30 at 1:33
add a comment |
1
I would lile to add, that o is mostly can be like u, but not a in those cases. Especially when we speak about West and North Ukrainian.
– follower
Nov 29 at 12:27
1
The sound of “о”, when followed by stressed “у”, can also deviate somewhat towards /u/ in words like “кожу́х”. Still, a learner would do well pronouncing everything as written.
– Roman Odaisky
Nov 30 at 1:33
1
1
I would lile to add, that o is mostly can be like u, but not a in those cases. Especially when we speak about West and North Ukrainian.
– follower
Nov 29 at 12:27
I would lile to add, that o is mostly can be like u, but not a in those cases. Especially when we speak about West and North Ukrainian.
– follower
Nov 29 at 12:27
1
1
The sound of “о”, when followed by stressed “у”, can also deviate somewhat towards /u/ in words like “кожу́х”. Still, a learner would do well pronouncing everything as written.
– Roman Odaisky
Nov 30 at 1:33
The sound of “о”, when followed by stressed “у”, can also deviate somewhat towards /u/ in words like “кожу́х”. Still, a learner would do well pronouncing everything as written.
– Roman Odaisky
Nov 30 at 1:33
add a comment |
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