History of the International Phonetic Alphabet


The International Phonetic Alphabet was created soon after the International Phonetic Association was established in the late 19th century. It was intended as an international system of phonetic transcription for oral languages, originally for pedagogical purposes. The Association was established in Paris in 1886 by French and British language teachers led by Paul Passy. The prototype of the alphabet appeared in. The Association based their alphabet upon the Romic alphabet of Henry Sweet, which in turn was based on the Phonotypic Alphabet of Isaac Pitman and the Palæotype of Alexander John Ellis.
The alphabet has undergone a number of revisions during its history, the most significant being the one put forth at the Kiel Convention in 1989. Changes to the alphabet are proposed and discussed in the Association's organ, Journal of the International Phonetic Association, previously known as Le Maître Phonétique and before that as The Phonetic Teacher, and then put to a vote by the Association's Council.
The extensions to the IPA for disordered speech were created in 1990, with its first major revision approved in 2016.

Early alphabets

The International Phonetic Association was founded in Paris in 1886 under the name Dhi Fonètik Tîtcerz' Asóciécon, a development of L'Association phonétique des professeurs d'Anglais, to promote an international phonetic alphabet, designed primarily for English, French, and German, for use in schools to facilitate acquiring foreign pronunciation.
Originally the letters had different phonetic values from language to language. For example, English was transcribed with and French with.
As of May and November 1887, the alphabets were as follows:

1888 alphabet

In the August–September 1888 issue of its journal, the Phonetic Teachers' Association published a standardized alphabet intended for transcription of multiple languages, reflecting its members' consensus that only one set of alphabet ought to be used for all languages, along with a set of six principles:

  1. There should be a separate sign for each distinctive sound; that is, for each sound which, being used instead of another, in the same language, can change the meaning of a word.
  2. When any sound is found in several languages, the same sign should be used in all. This applies also to very similar shades of sound.
  3. The alphabet should consist as much as possible of the ordinary letters of the roman alphabet; as few new letters as possible being used.
  4. In assigning values to the roman letters, international usage should decide.
  5. The new letters should be suggestive of the sounds they represent, by their resemblance to the old ones.
  6. Diacritic marks should be avoided, being trying for the eyes and troublesome to write.

The principles would govern all future development of the alphabet, with the exception of #5 and in some cases #2, until they were revised drastically in 1989. #6 has also been loosened, as diacritics have been admitted for limited purposes.
The devised alphabet was as follows. The letters marked with an asterisk were "provisional shapes", which were meant to be replaced "when circumstances will allow".

1900 chart

During the 1890s, the alphabet was expanded to cover sounds of Arabic and other non-European languages which did not easily fit the Latin alphabet.
Throughout the first half of the 1900s, the Association published a series of booklets outlining the specifications of the alphabet in several languages, the first being a French edition published in 1900. In the book, the chart appeared as follows:
Initially, the charts were arranged with laryngeal sounds on the left and labial ones on the right, following the convention of Alexander Melville Bell's Visible Speech. Vowels and consonants were placed in a single chart, reflecting how sounds ranged in openness from stops to open vowels. The voiced velar fricative was represented by since 1895 until it was replaced by in 1900. too would be replaced by in 1931.
Not all letters, especially those in the fricatives row which included both fricatives in the modern sense and approximants, were self-explanatory and could only be discerned in the notes following the chart, which redefined letters using the orthographies of languages wherein the sounds they represent occur. For example:
the Arabic ain . is a simple bilabial fricative ... is the English hard th, Spanish z, Romaic θ, Icelandic þ; the English soft th, Icelandic ð, Romaic δ. is the non-rolled r of Southern British, and can also be used for the simple r of Spanish and Portuguese ... is found in German in ach;, in wagen, as often pronounced in the north of Germany . is the Arabic kh as in khalifa ; the Danish r; the Parisian r is intermediate between and. — and are the ha and he in Arabic. — and are sounds in Circassian .

Nasalized vowels were marked with a tilde:,, etc. It was noted that may be used for "any vowel of obscure and intermediate quality found in weak syllables". A long sound was distinguished by trailing. Stress may be marked by before the stressed syllable, as necessary, and the Swedish and Norwegian 'compound tone' with before the syllable.
A voiced sound was marked by and a voiceless one by. Retroflex consonants were marked by, as in. Arabic emphatic consonants were marked by :. Consonants accompanied by a glottal stop were marked by :. Tense and lax vowels were distinguished by acute and grave accents: naught, not. Non-syllabic vowels were marked by a breve, as in, and syllabic consonants by an acute below, as in. Following letters, stood for advanced tongue, for retracted tongue, for more open, for more close, for more rounded, and for more spread. It was also noted that a superscript letter may be used to indicate a tinge of that sound in the sound represented by the preceding letter, as in.
It was emphasized, however, that such details need not usually be repeated in transcription. The equivalent part of the 1904 English edition said:
t must remain a general principle to leave out everything self-evident, and everything that can be explained once for all. This allows us to dispense almost completely with the modifiers, and with a good many other signs, except in scientific works and in introductory explanations. We write English fill and French fil the same way ; yet the English vowel is 'wide' and the French 'narrow', and the English is formed much further back than the French. If we wanted to mark these differences, we should write English, French. But we need not do so: we know, once for all, that English short is always, and French always ; that English is always and French always.

1904 chart

In the 1904 Aim and Principles of the International Phonetic Association, the first of its kind in English, the chart appeared as:
In comparison to the 1900 chart, the glottal stop appeared as a modifier letter rather than a full letter, replaced, and replaced. were removed from the chart and instead only mentioned as having "been suggested for a Circassian dental hiss and its voiced correspondent". is suggested for the Bantu labialized sibilant, and as a diacritic to mark click consonants. It is noted that some prefer iconic to, and that and are unsatisfactory letters.
Laryngeal consonants had also been moved around, reflecting little understanding about the mechanisms of laryngeal articulations at the time. and were defined as the Arabic ح and ع.
In the notes, the half-length mark is now mentioned, and it is noted that whispered sounds may be marked with a diacritical comma, as in. A syllabic consonant is now marked by a vertical bar, as in, rather than. It is noted, in this edition only, that "shifted vowels" may be indicated: for in-mixed or in-front, and for out-back.

1912 chart

Following 1904, sets of specifications in French appeared in 1905 and 1908, with little to no changes. In 1912, the second English booklet appeared. For the first time, labial sounds were shown on the left and laryngeal ones on the right:
was added for the Czech fricative trill, replaced and replaced, following their approval in 1909. Though not included in the chart, was mentioned as an optional letter for the labiodental nasal. was still designated as the "provisional" letter for the alveolar tap/flap. were defined as the Bantu sounds with "tongue position of θ, ð, combined with strong lip-rounding". were still included though not in the chart. was removed entirely.
For the first time, affricates, or ssibilated' consonant groups, i. e. groups in which the two elements are so closely connected that the whole might be treated as a single sound", were noted as able to be represented with a tie bar, as in. Palatalized consonants could be marked by a dot above the letter, as in, "suggesting the connexion with the sounds i and j".
were no longer mentioned.

1921 chart

The 1921 Écriture phonétique internationale introduced new letters, some of which were never to be seen in any other booklet:
replaced and replaced, both of which would not officially be approved until 1928. replaced and was added for a devoiced, but neither has appeared in any other IPA chart and the latter is not supported by Unicode. Also added were dedicated letters for the central vowels,, which appeared again in and in the chart in Le Maître Phonétique from 1926 to 1927, though without the Council's approval. Of these, only were approved in the 1928 revision, with a different value for, until were revived and regained the 1921 value in 1993. The old convention of was retained for where central vowels were not phonemically distinct. were still for obscure or indeterminate vowels, as opposed to the others, which would indicate clear pronunciations.
The book also mentioned letters "already commonly used in special works", some of which had long been part of the IPA but others which "have not yet been definitively adopted":
It also introduced several new suprasegmental specifications:
It recommended the use of a circumflex for the Swedish grave accent, as in . It was mentioned that some authors prefer in place of. Aspiration was marked as and stronger aspiration as.
The click letters were conceived by Daniel Jones. In 1960, A. C. Gimson wrote to a colleague:
Paul Passy recognized the need for letters for the various clicks in the July–August 1914 number of Le Maître Phonétique and asked for suggestions. This number, however, was the last for some years because of the war. During this interval, Professor Daniel Jones himself invented the four letters, in consultation with Paul Passy and they were all four printed in the pamphlet L'Écriture Phonétique Internationale published in 1921. The letters were thus introduced in a somewhat unusual way, without the explicit consent of the whole Council of the Association. They were, however, generally accepted from then on, and, as you say, were used by Professor Doke in 1923. I have consulted Professor Jones in this matter, and he accepts responsibility for their invention, during the period of the First World War.

would be approved by the Council in 1928. would be included in all subsequent booklets, but not in the single-page charts. They would be replaced with the Lepsius/Bleek letters in the 1989 Kiel revision.
The 1921 book was the first in the series to mention the word phoneme.

1925 Copenhagen Conference and 1927 revision

In April 1925, 12 linguists led by Otto Jespersen, including IPA Secretary Daniel Jones, attended a conference in Copenhagen and proposed specifications for a standardized system of phonetic notation. The proposals were largely dismissed by the members of the IPA Council. Nonetheless, the following additions recommended by the Conference were approved in 1927:
In 1928, the following letters were adopted:
The following letters, which had appeared in earlier editions, were repeated or formalized:
also included for a labiodental nasal, for a dental or alveolar tap, for a palatal click, and the tonal notation system seen in. For the Swedish and Norwegian compound tones he recommended "any arbitrarily chosen mark", with the illustration . He used in place of. Apart from and, these new specifications would be inherited in the subsequent charts and booklets. The diacritics for whispered,, and for tense and lax,, were no longer mentioned.

1932 chart

An updated chart appeared as a supplement to Le Maître Phonétique in 1932.
The vowels were now arranged in a right-angled trapezium as opposed to an isosceles trapezium, reflecting Daniel Jones's development of the Cardinal Vowel theory. A practically identical chart—with the exception of —in German had appeared in. The substitution of for was approved in 1931.
The accompanying notes read:

.—Palatalized consonants:, etc. Velarized or pharyngealized consonants:, etc. Ejective consonants :, etc. Implosive voiced consonants:, etc. fricative trill. . . . . . . . .


Affricates are normally represented by groups of two consonants, but, when necessary, ligatures are used, or the marks or . may occasionally be used in place of. Aspirated plosives:, etc.


.— . . . . ; ; ; ; ; ; ; . See Écriture Phonétique Internationale, p. 9.


.— nasality. breath. voice. slight aspiration following, etc. specially close vowel. specially open vowel. labialization. dental articulation. palatalization. tongue slightly raised. tongue slightly lowered. lips more rounded. lips more spread. Central vowels , , , ,. syllabic consonant. consonantal vowel. variety of resembling, etc.

1938 chart

A new chart appeared in 1938, with a few modifications. was replaced by, which was approved earlier in the year with the compromise also acknowledged as an alternative. The use of tie bars was allowed for synchronous articulation in addition to affricates, as in for simultaneous and, which was approved in 1937. In the notes, the reference to, in regard to tonal notation was removed.

1947 chart

A new chart appeared in 1947, reflecting minor developments up to the point. They were:
The word "plosives" in the description of ejectives and the qualifier "slightly" in the definitions of were removed.

1949 ''Principles''

The 1949 Principles of the International Phonetic Association was the last installment in the series until it was superseded by the Handbook of the IPA in 1999. It introduced some new specifications:
None of these specifications were inherited in the subsequent charts. was defined as an indicator of "medium stress".
was defined as a velar click, whereas previously it had been identified as the Khoekhoe click not found in Xhosa.
In 1948, and were approved as typographic alternatives, while it was also acknowledged that may be used for a velar plosive and for an advanced one in narrow transcription of a language where it is preferable to distinguish the two, such as Russian. The 1949 Principles recommended this alternation of the letters but did not mention their typographic equivalency in other languages. Nevertheless, the recommendation was hardly adopted, not even by, who used and.

1951 chart

The 1951 chart added as yet another alternative to an r-coloured, following its approval in 1950. Conceived by John S. Kenyon, the letter was in itself a combination of and the hook for retroflex consonants approved by the IPA in 1927. Since its introduction in 1935, the letter was widely adopted by American linguists and the IPA had been asked to recognize it as part of the alphabet.

1979 chart

In 1979, a revised chart appeared, incorporating the developments in the alphabet which were made earlier in the decade:
for a retroflex approximant was approved in 1973. On the same occasion,,,, and or as alternatives for were proposed but the votes were inconclusive. Diacritics for retroflexion, for palatalization, and for indicating non-fricative continuant were proposed but rejected.
The following changes were approved in 1976:
On the same occasion, the following letters and diacritics were removed because they had "fallen into disuse":
On the other hand, for the close-mid central unrounded vowel, for the open-mid central rounded vowel, and for the open central unrounded vowel were proposed but rejected. The proposal of was based on. for the voiced palatal fricative and for creaky voice were proposed but the votes were inconclusive.
In the 1979 chart,, previously defined as "lowered varieties of ", appeared slightly centered rather than simply midway between and as they did in the 1912 chart., the predecessors to, were acknowledged as alternatives to under the section "Other symbols". appeared as the rounded counterpart to rather than between and.
The name of the column "Dental and alveolar" was changed to "Dental, alveolar, or post-alveolar". "Pharyngeal", "trill", "tap or flap", and "approximant" replaced "", "rolled", "flapped", and "frictionless continuants", respectively., which were listed twice in both the fricative and frictionless continuant rows in the previous charts, now appeared as an approximant and a fricative, respectively, while the line between the rows was erased, indicating certain fricative letters may represent approximants and vice versa, with the employment of the raised and lowered diacritics if necessary., previously defined as "voiceless ", was specified as a fricative. remained listed twice in the fricative and approximant rows., previously defined merely as "a sound between and ", was redefined as an alveolar lateral flap, in keeping with the use for which it had been originally approved, "a sound between l and d".

1989 Kiel Convention

By the 1980s, phonetic theories had developed so much since the inception of the alphabet that the framework of it had become outdated. To resolve this, at the initiative of IPA President Peter Ladefoged, approximately 120 members of the IPA gathered at a convention held in Kiel, West Germany, in August 1989, to discuss revisions of both the alphabet and the principles it is founded upon. It was at this convention that it was decided that the Handbook of the IPA be written and published to supersede the 1949 Principles.
In addition to the revisions of the alphabet, two workgroups were set up, one on computer coding of IPA characters and computer representation of individual languages, and the other on pathological speech and voice quality. The former group concluded that each IPA character should be assigned a three-digit number for computer coding known as IPA Number, which was published in. The latter devised a set of recommendations for the transcription of disordered speech based on the IPA known as the Extensions to the International Phonetic Alphabet or extIPA, which was published in 1990 and adopted by the International Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics Association, which now maintains it, in 1994.
A drastically renewed chart of the alphabet reflecting decisions made at the convention appeared later in the year. Additions were:
Tone, which had been indicated with an iconic line preceding the syllable or above or below the vowel, was now written one of two ways: with a similar iconic line following the syllable and anchored to a vertical bar, as in , or with more abstract diacritics written over the vowel, which could be compounded with each other, as in.
The palato-alveolar column was removed and were listed alongside the postalveolars. appeared at the same horizontal position as the other alveolars rather than slightly more back as did in the previous charts. was specified as a trill rather than either a trill or flap. The alternative raised and lowered diacritics were eliminated in favour of, which could now be attached to consonants to denote fricative or approximant, as in. Diacritics for relative articulation placed next to, rather than below, a letter, namely, were no longer mentioned. The diacritic for no audible release was finally mentioned in the chart.
were eliminated in favour of. The letter for the close-mid back unrounded vowel was revised from , with a flat top, to , with a rounded top, to better distinguish it from, which represents a voiced velar fricative. was revived in place of. was no longer mentioned, and instead a right-hook diacritic was added for rhoticity; the superscript rhotic diacritics were no longer mentioned.
for palatalized and for the alveolar fricative trill were withdrawn. The affricate ligatures were withdrawn. The tie bar below letters for affricates and doubly articulated consonants, as in, was no longer mentioned. The practice of placing a superscript letter to indicate the resemblance to a sound, previously illustrated by, was no longer explicitly recommended.
At the convention, proposals such as for a voiced labial–velar fricative, for a voiceless velar lateral fricative, for a voiced velar lateral fricative, for a voiceless palatal lateral fricative, for "the 'hissing-hussing' fricatives of some Caucasian languages", and for an open central unrounded vowel were discussed but dismissed.

New principles

The six principles set out in 1888 were replaced by a much longer text consisting of seven paragraphs. The first two paragraphs established the alphabet's purpose, namely to be "a set of symbols for representing all the possible sounds of the world's languages" and "representing fine distinctions of sound quality, making the IPA well suited for use in all disciplines in which the representation of speech sounds is required". The second paragraph also said, " is a shorthand way of designating the intersection of the categories voiceless, bilabial, and plosive; is the intersection of the categories voiced, bilabial, and nasal; and so on", refining the previous, less clearly defined principle #2 with the application of the distinctive feature theory. Discouragement of diacritics was relaxed, though recommending their use be limited: " For denoting length, stress and pitch. For representing minute shades of sounds. When the introduction of a single, diacritic obviates the necessity for designing a number of new symbols ". The principles also adopted the recommendation of enclosing phonetic transcriptions in square brackets and phonemic ones in slashes / /, a practice that emerged in the 1940s. The principles were reprinted in the 1999 Handbook.

1993 revision

Following the 1989 revision, a number of proposals for revisions appeared in the Journal of the IPA, which were submitted to the Council of the IPA. In 1993, the Council approved the following changes:
On the same occasion, it was reaffirmed that and are typographic alternatives.
The revised chart was now portrait-oriented. and were moved to the centerline of the vowel chart, indicating that they are not necessarily unrounded. The word "voiced" was removed from the definition for, now simply "epiglottal plosive". "Other symbols" and diacritics were slightly rearranged. The outer stroke of the letter for a bilabial click was modified from a circle with a consistent width to the shape of uppercase O.

1996 update

In 1996, it was announced that the form of the open-mid central rounded vowel in the 1993 chart,, was a typographical error and should be changed to, stating the latter was the form that "J. C. Catford had in mind when he proposed the central vowel changes ... in 1990", also citing and, who had. However, the letter Catford had proposed for the value in 1990 was in fact , with an alternative being, but not. Errata for appeared in 1992, but the printed form was again and the errata even acknowledged that was included in, as pointed out by David Abercrombie.
In the updated chart, which was published in the front matter of the 1999 Handbook of the IPA, the subsections were rearranged so that the left edge of the vowel chart appeared right beneath the palatal column, hinting at the palatal place of articulation for, as did in all pre-1989 charts, though the space did not allow the back vowels to appear beneath the velars. A tie bar placed below letters, as in, was mentioned again. was now attached to the preceding letter, as in. A few illustrations in the chart were changed: was added for rhoticity, and were replaced with. The examples of "high rising" and "low rising" tone contours were changed from and to and , respectively. The word "etc." was dropped from the list of contours, though the 1999 Handbook would continue to use contours that did not appear on the chart.

1999 ''Handbook''

The 1999 Handbook of the International Phonetic Association was the first book outlining the specifications of the alphabet in 50 years, superseding the 1949 Principles of the IPA. It consisted of just over 200 pages, four times as long as the Principles. In addition to what was seen in the 1996 chart, the book included for mid central vowel release, for voiceless dental fricative release, and for voiceless velar fricative release as part of the official IPA in the "Computer coding of IPA symbols" section. The section also included for a voiced retroflex implosive, noting it was "not explicitly IPA approved". The book also said "might be used" for "a secondary reduction of the lip opening accompanied by neither protrusion nor velar constriction". It abandoned the 1949 Principles recommendation of alternating and for ordinary and advanced velar plosives, and acknowledged both shapes as acceptable variants.

21st-century developments

In 2005, was added for the labiodental flap.
In 2011, it was proposed that be added to represent the open central unrounded vowel, but this was declined by the Council the following year.
In 2012, the IPA chart and its subparts were released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
In 2016, three versions of a revised chart dated 2015 were released online, each with the characters rendered in a different typeface. No character was added or withdrawn, but some notes and the shapes of a few were slightly modified. In particular, was replaced by, with a continuous, slanted stroke, and the example of a "rising–falling" tone contour was changed from to .
In 2018, another slightly modified chart in different fonts was released, this time also in TeX TIPA Roman developed by Rei Fukui, which was selected as best representing the IPA symbol set by the Association's Alphabet, Charts and Fonts committee, established the previous year. The example of a "rising–falling" tone contour was again changed from to .
In 2020, another set of charts was released, with the only changes being minor adjustments in the layout, and Creative Commons icons replacing the copyright sign.

Summary

Values that have been represented by different characters

Characters that have been given different values