Template:Usage of IPA templates

Usage of IPA pronunciation templates
Wikipedia offers several templates for proper display of IPA transcriptions.

IPA font
In general, IPA symbols on a page should be enclosed in the template, which formats the text in an IPA-producing font. If a substantial portion of a page uses IPA, it is customary to post notice of that fact with, though each token still requires the template for proper formatting.

If there are not enough occurrences to warrant a notice, then consider a template that links to an IPA key for the first instance of the IPA on a page or section.

English words
For English words, in a broad, non-regional transcription, as when giving the pronunciation of a key word in an article, use IPAc-en, which links to Help:IPA/English, a chart of the subset of the IPA that is relevant to English, and automates the conversion to IPA, so that  appears as. This provides mouse-over links to the symbols, and is now the preferred template.

For a specific transcription in a regional variety, use IPA-endia or IPA-all.

Non-English words
For words that are not assimilated into English, regional pronunciations of English words, and non-standard English dialects, use templates linking to the more general Help:IPA chart, containing all major IPA symbols:
 * IPA-all, appearing as: . Or:
 * For specific languages, there may be dedicated IPA keys for standardized transcription. There are several options for their display. The first cell includes the ISO code of the language; the second is the transcription; the third keys an introductory phrase; and the fourth is space for a sound file. Using the French word eau as an example, we have the default format:
 * Or the word "pronounced" can be used as the introduction:
 * Language name only:
 * "IPA" only:
 * Link only:
 * Any of these may be combined with a sound file:
 * For the default introductory phrase, however, a placeholder such as “-” is required:
 * Link only:
 * Any of these may be combined with a sound file:
 * For the default introductory phrase, however, a placeholder such as “-” is required:
 * Any of these may be combined with a sound file:
 * For the default introductory phrase, however, a placeholder such as “-” is required:
 * For the default introductory phrase, however, a placeholder such as “-” is required:

Languages without dedicated keys
Templates have been created for languages which do not yet have dedicated key pages. Transcriptions which use these templates will link to Help:IPA for the time being; when a language-specific key is created the templates will be linked accordingly. For example, you can use for Javanese, but for the moment it will link to Help:IPA, producing.


 * : Acehnese
 * : Avestan
 * : Saidi Arabic
 * : Eastern Arrernte
 * : Gulf Arabic
 * : Ainu
 * : Akan (Fante, Twi)
 * : Akkadian
 * : Aleut
 * : Algonquian (Micmac, Cree)
 * : (transcriptions not specific to any language, or which have not yet been reassigned)
 * : Albanian dialects
 * : Aragonese
 * : Mapuche
 * : artificial (Ido, Tolkien, etc.)
 * : Athabaskan (Dene, Navajo)
 * : Aymara
 * : Uto-Aztecan (Shoshone, Comanche)
 * : Bashkir
 * : Bavarian
 * : Bislama
 * : Manding/Bambara
 * : Bodish
 * : (North) Caucasian
 * : Caddoan
 * : Eastern Min
 * : Cebuano
 * : Celtic (Brythonic, Gaulish)
 * : Chamorro
 * : Cherokee
 * : Coptic
 * : Kashubian
 * : Chuvash
 * : German dialects
 * : Dhivehi
 * : Dogri
 * : Dzongkha
 * : Gbe (Ewe, Fon)
 * : English dialects
 * : Middle English
 * : Spanish dialects
 * : Faroese
 * : French dialects (Canadian, Metis, Norman)
 * : North Frisian
 * : Friulian
 * : Gagauz
 * : French Guianese Creole
 * : Ge'ez
 * : Guaraní
 * : Wayuu
 * : Hausa
 * : Hakka
 * : Hopi
 * : Iroquoian (Mohawk, Cherokee)
 * : Iu Mien
 * : Javanese
 * : Kusunda
 * : Kikuyu
 * : Western Keres
 * : Kannada
 * : Konkani
 * : Kashmiri
 * : S'gaw Karen
 * : Cornish
 * : Ladino
 * : Ganda
 * : Limburgish
 * : Livonian
 * : Ladin
 * : Middle Chinese
 * : Laz
 * : Maithili
 * : Makasar
 * : Central Mazahua
 * : Middle Irish
 * : Neo-Mandaic
 * : Manchu
 * : Mon
 * : Mohawk
 * : Mossi/Gurunsi
 * : Muskogean (Chickasaw, Creek)
 * : Nauruan
 * : Minnan/Taiwanese
 * : Classical Nahuatl
 * : Low Saxon
 * : Newar
 * : Old Norse
 * : Norman
 * : Nuer
 * : Chewa
 * : Oaxaca (Zapotec, Mixe, Otomi)
 * : Oromo
 * : Ossetian
 * : Papiamento
 * : Picard
 * : Pennsylvania German
 * : Pali (linked to Sanskrit)
 * : Pitjantjatjara
 * : (other) Polynesian
 * : Pashto
 * : Portuguese dialects
 * : Quenya
 * : Rejang
 * : Romani
 * : Rwanda-Rundi
 * : Okinawan langs
 * : Salish & NW Coast
 * : Scots
 * : Sindhi
 * : Northern Sami
 * : Sechelt
 * : Seri
 * : (ancient) Semitic, Egyptian
 * : Old Irish
 * : Sinhala
 * : Siouan (Omaha, Lakota)
 * : Sindarin
 * : Slavic (old Slavic, Silesian, Sorbian)
 * : Samoan
 * : Southern Sami
 * : Lule Sami
 * : Shona
 * : Somali
 * : Sranan Tongo
 * : Sotho
 * : Saterland Frisian
 * : Sundanese
 * : Sumerian
 * : Svan
 * : Classical Syriac
 * : Syriac
 * : Tetum
 * : Tewa
 * : Southern Tiwa
 * : Klingon
 * : Tswana
 * : Tongan
 * : Tsonga
 * : Tahitian
 * : Tuvan
 * : Talossan
 * : Uyghur
 * : Venda
 * : West Flemish
 * : Wandamen
 * : Wolof
 * : Warlpiri
 * : Mingrelian
 * : Zuni

Conversion to IPA
The template x2i takes X-SAMPA symbols (ASCII equivalents of IPA symbols) and converts them to IPA.

Other language-specific templates allow you to enter ordinary letters (or conventional ASCII equivalents) in place of IPA characters, and they will be automatically converted to the phonetic symbols that are used to transcribe the language. The templates that are currently available are shown below, with examples:

The following templates have also been created, but they haven't been vetted by the community and may not work properly:


 * : Old English
 * : German
 * : Icelandic
 * : Latin
 * : Dutch
 * : Ukrainian