Learn English – Could you clarify /e/ and /ɛ/

pronunciation

This is quite confusing!

In the Standard IPA vowel chart, there are /e/ and /ɛ/. See the below picture:

Standard IPA

(Source: Wikipedia)

However, many American English vowel charts don't have /e/. So, I think that some English dialects (like General American) don't have /e/, they only have /ɛ/. See the below General American Vowel chart:

General American IPA

(Source: Wikipedia)

In contrast, the British vowel chart has /e/ but doesn't have /ɛ/. See the below Received Pronunciation Vowel chart:

British Chart

(Source: Wikipedia)

As you can see, the /e/ in British chart is in the position "mid-near front" whereas the /e/ in standard IPA is in the position "close-mid-near front".

The confusing things are in the dictionary. See the word "bed", some American pronounce it as /ˈbɛd/ (Source: learnersdictionary.com), other American dictionaries write it as /bed/ (Source: Cambridge Dictionary).

However, most dictionaries pronounce "save" as /seɪv/.

Also, most pronunciation teachers do not teach pronouncing /e/ as a monophthong, but rather they teach pronouncing it as /eɪ/. But it seems English native speakers cannot pronounce or have never pronounced the /e/ in the position "close-mid-near front" as in standard IPA. However, people using other languages can.

So, could you clarify /e/ and /ɛ/?

Best Answer

Take a look at this chart.

I will reproduce the relevant section of it.

. red raid RP e~ɛ ɛɪ AmE ɛ eɪ~e ScE ɛ e AusE e æɪ

So in Southern British English, the distinction between red and raid is that the vowel of raid is a diphthong (and is longer), and /e/ and /eɪ/ are reasonable symbols for these vowels. In Scottish English, the distinction between red and raid is that the vowel of red is more open, and the most reasonable symbols for them are /ɛ/ and /e/.

In American English, raid is distinguished from red both by being a diphthong and by being closer. In fact, some American dialects pronounce this phoneme as a monophthong if it's before a voiceless consonants (as in rate). The phoneme /e/ from other languages is generally heard as the phoneme /eɪ/ by Americans, so the open/closeness seems more important in recognizing the phoneme than whether or not it's a diphthong.

So as an answer for your question: red might be pronounced as /red/ in RP (standard British English) and in Australian English, but it is not in American English and Scottish English.

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