< Introduction to Italian

Introduction to Italian/Lesson 2

The Italian Alphabet

The national park of Abruzzo in Italy.

The Italian alphabet is very similar to the English alphabet:

LetterNameIPALetterNameIPA
A, aa/a/N, nenne/n/
B, bbi/b/O, oo/o/ or /ɔ/
C, cci/k/ or /tʃ/P, ppi/p/
D, ddi/d/Q, qcu/k/
E, ee/e/ or /ɛ/R, rerre/r/
F, feffe/f/S, sesse/s/ or /z/
G, ggi/g/ or /dʒ/T, tti/t/
H, hacca(silent)U, uu/u/ or /w/
I, ii/i/ or /j/V, vvi, vu/v/
L, lelle/l/Z, zzeta/dz/ or /ts/
M, memme/m/

Notice that it lacks the letters j, k, w, x, and y. These are "foreign letters" used only in loanwords.

LetterNameIPALetterNameIPA
J, ji lunga, gèi/dʒ/X, xics/ks/
K, kcappa/k/Y, yipsilon, i greca/y/
W, wdoppia vi, doppia vu, vi doppia, vu doppia[N 1]/v/

It is important to notice that letters are all feminine nouns.

Vowel pronunciations

Each vowel has basically one pronunciation. They are as follows:
a - pronounced roughly like the a in father or class, like the sound a dentist might have you make when you open your mouth wide. It is usually pronounced in a relaxed way, but hardens when an accent mark is added (à).
e - pronounced like the e in pest or Edward. When it has an accent (è) it is pronounced like the a in plate or the ei in eight.
i - pronounced like the ee in feed or the ea in peak.
o - pronounced like the oa in boat or the oe in toe.
u - pronounced like the o in to or who.

Note on accented vowels

In some languages accented letters are counted as their own letters (for instance, in Swedish the letter ä is considered different from the letter a). In Italian, à and è are just variations on a and e. So in a dictionary, the words ‘‘e’’ and ‘‘ è’’ will appear immediately after one another.

Consonant pronunciations

Most Italian consonants are pronounced the same as they are in English:

The Colosseum is an ancient arena in Roma (Rome), the capital of Italy.
Consonant or
consonant combination
Pronunciation
bSame as b in bat.
ca, co, cuSame as c in cat, cot, cut
ce, ciSame as ch in chair, cheese
che, chiSame as k in kay, key
dSame as d in dog
fSame as f in fake
ga, goSame as g in gab, gob
ge, giSame as g in gem
ghSame as gh in Pittsburgh
gla, gle, glo, gluSame as gl in ugly
gliSame as ll in billion
gnSame as ny in Bunyan
guSame as gu in anguish
hSame as h in honest
lSame as l in lake
mSame as m in mom
nSame as n in not
pSame as p in post
quSame as qu in queen
rSame as r in race, but rolled (your tongue should vibrate up and down when you pronounce it)
sSame as s in sorry; sometimes as z as in zoo
tSame as t in time
vSame as v in violin
zSame as z in zoo, but often as dz or tz (think pizza)
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Notes

  1. Notice that all the Italian names for "W" mean "double V", instead of the English "double U".
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