Polish alphabet is a little bit different from English one. There're few characters that do not belong to English one.
Ą, Ć, Ę, Ł, Ń, Ó, Ż, Ź
Before we even start you need to know that in Polish alphabet (it doesn't have any name like Korean alphabet which is called Hangul or Russian one- Cyrillic) has it's own pronuncination which is a little bit difficult to describe. So the best way to learn how it sounds is to play this video and repeat after the person:
The Polish alphabet itself has 32 characters (23 consonants 9 vowels). A good rule to remember is that with the most Polish words, the stress lies on the second last syllable.
A [a] like in' naah'
Ą [ɔ̃]
B [b] 'boom'
C [t͡s]
Ć [t̠͡ɕ]
D [d] /dumb/
E [ɛ] (you pronounce it like in /desk/)
Ę [ɛ̃]
F [f] /flute/
G [g] /gloomy/
H [x] /hha/
I [i] /ee/
J [j] / yak/
K [k] /crack/
L [l] /llama/
Ł [w]
M [m] /mom/
N [n] /nope/
Ń [ɲ]
O [o] /lock/
Ó [u]
P [p] /pick/
R [r] /rocket/ it's a really hard 'r'
S [ɔ] /ss/
Ś [ɕ]
T [t] /tall/
U [u] /oo/
W [v] /v/
Y [ɨ] /ygh/
Z [z] /zip/
Ż [ʑ]
Ź [ʐ]R
emember that Polish is not as flawless as English or Spanish. It's hard in sound.
I know these phonetics don't tell you much about how to say additional characters but sometimes is better to hear it and try to say it multiple times so that's why I added the video. Try to pronounce it as many times you want.
Let's go to the next one!
(Przejdźmy dalej!)
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Learning Polish
Random#721 iN NON-FICTION I'm 100% Polish, I promise. I decided to create this book to help all learners in learning Polish which is not as hard as you might think it is. If you have any questions or some things you'd like to know private message me or co...