Polish phonology

The phonological system of the Polish language is similar in many ways to those of other Slavic languages, although there are some characteristic features found in only a few other languages of the family, such as contrasting retroflex and palatal fricatives and affricates, and nasal vowels. The vowel system is relatively simple, with just six oral monophthongs and two nasals, while the consonant system is more complex.

Vowels

Polish oral vowels depicted on a vowel diagram, from Rocławski (1976:75). Main allophones (in black) are in broad transcription, whereas positional allophones (in red and green) are in narrow transcription. The central vowel [ɜ] is an unstressed allophone of /ɛ, ɔ, a/ in certain contexts.

The Polish vowel system consists of six oral monophthongs and two nasal diphthongs. Vowel nasality in Polish is partially preserved from Proto-Slavic, having been lost in most other modern Slavic languages.

Monophthong phonemes
Front Central Back
Close i ɨ u
Mid ɛ ɔ
Open a

Close vowels

  • /i/ is close front unrounded [i].[1][2]
  • /ɨ/ is close-mid advanced central unrounded [ɘ̟].[1][2]
    • Older sources describe this vowel differently:
      • According to Rocławski (1976), it is near-close central unrounded [ɨ̞], with a close-mid central unrounded [ɘ] allophone being optional before /r/ and in some unstressed positions.
      • According to Wierzchowska (1971) and Jassem (1971), it is near-close near-front unrounded [ɪ]. However, according to Rocławski (1976), this realization is present only in northeastern dialects.
  • /u/ is close back rounded [u].[1][2] Between soft consonants, it is somewhat fronted [u̟].

Mid vowels

  • /ɛ/ is open-mid front unrounded [ɛ].[1][2] According to the British phonetician John C. Wells, it is often noticeably centralized [ɛ̈], i.e. somewhat closer to a central vowel [ɜ].[3]
  • /ɔ/ is open-mid back.[1][2][4]
    • There is not a complete agreement about the rounding of /ɔ/:
      • According to Gussmann (2007), it is simply "rounded" [ɔ].[2]
      • According to Rocławski (1976), it is usually somewhat rounded [ɔ̜], but sometimes, it is pronounced with neutral lips [ʌ]. In the latter case, the lack of rounding is compensated for by a stronger retraction of the tongue.[5]
      • According to Wierzchowska (1967), it is unrounded [ʌ].
    • There is not a complete agreement about the realization of /ɔ/ between soft consonants:
      • According to Rocławski (1976), it can be any of the following: open-mid advanced back rounded [ɔ̟], slightly raised open-mid back rounded [ɔ̝] or mid advanced back rounded [ɔ̽][6]
      • According to Wiśniewski (2001), it is close-mid advanced back rounded [].

Open vowels

  • Most sources[7] describe the main allophone of /a/ as open central unrounded [ä]. However, Gussmann (2007) describes it as open front unrounded [a].[2]
Example words (click on a word to hear its pronunciation)
IPA Polish script Example
/i/ i  miś ('teddy bear')
/ɛ/ e  ten ('this one')
/ɨ/ y  mysz ('mouse')
/a/ a  ptak ('bird')
/u/ u/ó  bum ('boom')
/ɔ/ o  kot ('cat')
/ɛ̃/ ę  węże ('snakes')
/ɔ̃/ ą  wąż ('snake')

The nasal vowels do not feature uniform nasality over their duration. Phonetically, they consist of an oral vowel followed by a nasal semivowel (so that is pronounced [sɔw̃], which sounds closer to Portuguese são [sɐ̃w̃] than French sont [sɔ̃] – all three words mean "[they] are"). Therefore, they are phonetically diphthongs.[8] (For nasality following other vowel nuclei, see § Allophony below.) /ɛ ɨ ɔ ɛ̃ ɔ̃/ are also less commonly transcribed /e ɪ o ẽ õ/ respectively, for example by PWN-Oxford Polish-English Dictionary.[9]

Some speakers from southern and eastern Poland realize /ɛ, ɔ, ɨ/ tenser than in Standard Polish, i.e. as [ɛ̝, ɔ̝, ɪ]; this is not very common, especially the last realization.

Distribution

The vowels /ɨ/ and /i/ have largely complementary distribution. Either vowel may follow a labial consonant, as in mi ('to me') and my ('we'). Elsewhere, however, /i/ is usually restricted to word-initial position and positions after palatal consonants and the palatalized velars, while /ɨ/ cannot appear in those positions (see § Hard and soft consonants below). In some phonological descriptions of Polish that make a phonemic distinction between palatized and unpalatized labials, [ɨ] and [i] may thus be treated as allophones of a single phoneme. However /i/ appears outside its usual positions in some foreign-derived words, as in czipsy ('potato chips') and tir ('large lorry', see TIR). The vowels /ɨ/ and /i/ are considered to rhyme in Polish poetry out of tradition, as in the past /ɨ/ was closer to [ɪ], which is acoustically more similar to [i].

The nasal vowels do not occur except before a fricative and in word-final position. When the letters ą and ę appear before stops and affricates, they indicate an oral /ɔ/ or /ɛ/ followed by a nasal consonant homorganic with the following consonant. For example, kąt is [kɔnt] ('angle'), gęba ('mouth') is [ˈɡɛmba], and pięć ('five') is [pjɛɲt͡ɕ],[10] as if they were spelled *kont, *gemba, and *pieńć. Before /l/ or /w/, the nasality is lost altogether and the vowels are pronounced as oral [ɔ] or [ɛ]. It is also very common to denasalize /ɛ̃/ to [ɛ] in word-final position, as in będę /ˈbɛn.dɛ/ "I will be".

An alternative analysis postulates that nasal vowels no longer exist in Standard Polish as independent phonemes. The motivation for this is the fact that they are realized as actual nasal consonants before stops and affricates, while their nasal-diphthong realization before fricatives can be analyzed as allophonical realization of the sequences /on/, /om/ or /oɲ/ likewise. Moreover, studies indicate that the nasalization of the presumed nasal diphthongs ą [ɔw̃] and ę [ɛw̃] is no longer distinctive to native speakers in word-final position either, and is retained only in emphatic, hypercorrect or artificial speech.[11]

Historical development

Distinctive vowel length was inherited from late Proto-Slavic, with some changes (e.g. stressed acute and circumflex vowels were shortened, as well as some long vowels occurring after the stress). Additional vowel lengths were introduced in Proto-Polish (as in other West Slavic languages) as a result of compensatory lengthening when a yer in the next syllable disappeared: If a yer (or other vowel) disappeared, then the preceding vowel became long (unless it was also a yer, in which case it became a short e).

This system of vowel lengths is well preserved in Czech and to a lesser degree in Slovak. In the emerging modern Polish, however, the long vowels were shortened again, although sometimes (depending on dialect) with a change in quality (the vowels tended to become higher). The latter changes came to be incorporated into the standard language only in the case of long o and the long nasal vowel, mostly for vowels located before voiced obstruents. The vowel shift may thus be presented as follows:

  • long oral /aː/ → short oral /a/ (certain dialects: /ɒ/)
  • long oral /eː/ → short oral /ɛ/ (certain dialects: /ɨ/ or /i/)
  • long oral /ɨː/ or /iː/ → short oral /ɨ/ or /i/
  • long oral /oː/ → short oral /u/, written ó
  • long oral /uː/ → short oral /u/, written u
  • long nasal /ãː/ → short nasal /ɔ̃/, written ą

Note that the /u/ which was once a long /oː/ is still distinguished in script as ó. Former long /eː/ was written é until the 19th century (á for long /aː/ became disused sooner).

In most circumstances, consonants were palatalized when followed by an original front vowel, including the soft yer (ь) that was often later lost. For example: *dьnь became dzień ('day'), while *dьnьmъ became dniem ('day' instr.).

The history of the nasal vowels is as follows. The nasal vowels and of late Proto-Slavic merged ( leaving a trace by palatalizing the preceding consonant) to become the medieval Polish vowel /ã/, written ø. Like other Polish vowels, this developed long and short variants. The short variant developed into present-day /ɛ̃/ ę, while the long form became /ɔ̃/, written ą, as described above. Overall:

  • Proto-Slavic when short, when long (where the i represents palatalization of the preceding consonant)
  • Proto-Slavic ę when short, ą when long

These historical shifts are the reason for the alternations o:ó and ę:ą commonly encountered in Polish morphology. For example, *rogъ ('horn') became róg due to the loss of the following yer (originally pronounced with a long o, now with /u/), while the instrumental case of the same word went from *rogъmъ to rogiem (with no lengthening of the o). Similarly *dǫbъ ('oak') became dąb (originally with the long form of the nasal vowel), while in the instrumental *dǫbъmъ the vowel remained short and we now have dębem.

Dialectal variation

Polish dialects differ particularly in their realization of nasal vowels; both in terms of whether and when they are decomposed to an oral vowel followed by a nasal consonant, and in terms of the quality of the vowels used.

Also, some dialects preserve non-standard developments of the historical long vowels (see previous section); for example, a may be pronounced with [ɔ] in words where it was historically long.

Consonants

The Polish consonant system is more complicated; its characteristic features include the series of affricates and palatal consonants that resulted from four Proto-Slavic palatalizations and two further palatalizations which took place in Polish and Belarusian.

The consonant phonemes of Polish are as follows:[12]

Labial Dental,
Alveolar
Retroflex Palatal Velar
plain palatalized
Nasal m n ɲ
Plosive voiceless p t k
voiced b d ɡ ɡʲ
Affricate voiceless t͡s t͡ʂ t͡ɕ
voiced d͡z d͡ʐ d͡ʑ
Fricative voiceless f s ʂ ɕ x
voiced v z ʐ ʑ
Trill r
Approximant l j w

Alveolar [n t d] are allophones of /n t d/ before /t͡ʂ d͡ʐ/.[13] Denti-alveolar [] is an allophone of /l/ before dental consonants. /r/ is most often a tap [ɾ] in fast speech.[14]

The fricatives and affricates shown as retroflex may instead be transcribed as palato-alveolar consonants with /ʃ/, /ʒ/, etc. However, they are more accurately described as retroflex,[15] although they are laminal (like the retroflexes of Standard Chinese). They may therefore also be transcribed phonetically with the symbols ʐ̠ etc., indicating the laminal feature.

The phoneme /ɲ/ may be written with the non-standard symbol ȵ to indicate that it is alveolo-palatal, because ɲ represents a palatal nasal in standard IPA.

The phonemes /kʲ/ and /ɡʲ/ are less commonly transcribed as /c/ and /ɟ/ (i.e. as if they were palatal stops).

The contrasts between /k/ and /kʲ/, and between /ɡ/ and /ɡʲ/, have low functional loads.

Example words (click on a word to hear its pronunciation)
IPA Polish script Example IPA Polish script Example
/m/ m  masa ('mass') /d͡ʑ/ /dz(i)  więk ('sound')
/b/ b  bas ('bass') /t͡ɕ/ ć/c(i)  ćma ('moth')
/p/ p  pas ('belt') /ʐ/ ż/rz  żona ('wife')
 rzeka ('river')
/v/ w  wór ('bag') /ʂ/ sz  szum ('rustle')
/f/ f  futro ('fur') /d͡ʐ/  em ('jam')
/n/ n  noga ('leg') /t͡ʂ/ cz  czas ('time')
/d/ d  dom ('home') /ɲ/ ń/n(i)  koń ('horse')
/t/ t  tom ('volume') /ɡʲ/ g(i)  gips ('plaster cast')
/z/ z  zero ('zero') /kʲ/ k(i)  kiedy ('when')
/s/ s  sum ('catfish') /ɡ/ g  gmin ('populace')
/d͡z/ dz  dzwon ('bell') /k/ k  kmin ('cumin'),  buk ('beech tree')
/t͡s/ c  co ('what') /x/ h/ch  hak ('hook'),  chór ('choir')
/r/ r  krok ('step') /j/ j  jutro ('tomorrow')
/l/ l  pole ('field'),  liść ('leaf') /w/ ł  mały ('small'),  łaska ('grace')
/ʑ/ ź/z(i)  źrebię ('foal') /xʲ/ h(i)/ch(i)  historia ('history'),  chichot ('giggle')
/ɕ/ ś/s(i)  śruba ('screw')

The distinction between the laminal retroflex sounds (sz, ż, cz, dż) and the corresponding alveolo-palatals (ś, ź, ć, dź) – both of these series sound similar to the English palato-alveolar consonants (the sh and ch sounds and their voiced equivalents). The alveolo-palatals are pronounced with the body of the tongue raised to the palate. The series are known as "rustling" (szeleszczące) and "humming" (szumiące) respectively; the equivalent alveolar series (s, z, c, dz) is called "hissing" (syczące).

Polish contrasts affricates and stop–fricative clusters,[16] by the fricatives being longer in clusters than in affricates.[17] For example:

  •  czysta [ˈt͡ʂɨsta] ('clean' fem.) vs.  trzysta [ˈtʂˑɨsta] ('three hundred').
  •  em' [ˈd͡ʐɛm] ('jam') with vs.  drzem [ˈdʐˑɛm] ('take a nap' imper.).

This distinction is lost in some Lesser Polish dialects.

For the possibility of an additional glottal fricative phoneme /ɦ/ for h, see § Dialectal variation below.

Allophony

/x/ has a voiced allophone [ɣ] that occurs whenever /x/ is followed by a voiced obstruent (even across a word boundary), in accordance with the rules given under § Voicing and devoicing below. For example, dach ('roof') is [ˈdax], but dach domu ('roof of the house') is [daɣ ˈdɔmu].

/x/ has the strongest friction before consonants [x̝], weaker friction before vowels and weakest friction intervocalically, where it may be realized as glottal [h]. The intervocalic variant "may appear to be voiced".[18]

/n/ has a velar allophone, [ŋ], which occurs before velar consonants (as in bank 'bank').

Non-palatal consonants are weakly palatalized when they precede /i/. This is far less audible than it is in Russian.

The approximants /j/ and /w/ may be regarded as non-syllabic vowels when not followed by a vowel. For example, raj ('paradise') [rai̯], dał ('gave') [dau̯], autor ('author') [ˈau̯tɔr].

Before fricatives, nasal consonants may be realized as nasalized semivowels, analogous to /ɔ̃/ and /ɛ̃/ (see § Vowels above). This occurs in loanwords, and in free variation with the typical consonantal pronunciation (e.g. instynkt [ˈiw̃stɨŋkt⁓ˈinstɨŋkt] 'instinct').[19] Similarly, the palatal nasal [ɲ] in coda position is in free variation with a nasalized palatal approximant [ȷ̃].[10] For example, koń [koɲ⁓kɔj̃], Gdańsk [ɡdaɲsk⁓ɡdaj̃sk]

Distribution

Polish, like other Slavic languages, permits complex consonant clusters, which historically often arose from the disappearance of yers (see § Historical development above). Polish can have word-initial and word-medial clusters of up to four consonants, whereas word-final clusters can have up to five consonants.[20] Examples of such clusters can be found in words such as bezwzględny [bɛzˈvzɡlɛndnɨ] ('absolute' or 'heartless', 'ruthless'), źdźbło [ˈʑd͡ʑbwɔ] ('blade of grass'),  wstrząs [ˈfstʂɔw̃s] ('shock'), and krnąbrność [ˈkrnɔmbrnɔɕt͡ɕ] ('disobedience'). A popular Polish tongue-twister (from a verse by Jan Brzechwa) is  W Szczebrzeszynie chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie [fʂt͡ʂɛbʐɛˈʂɨɲɛ ˈxʂɔw̃ʂt͡ʂ ˈbʐmi fˈtʂt͡ɕiɲɛ] ('In Szczebrzeszyn a beetle buzzes in the reed').

For restrictions on combinations of voiced and voiceless consonants in clusters, see § Voicing and devoicing below. Unlike languages such as Czech, Polish does not have syllabic consonants – the nucleus of a syllable is always a vowel.

The consonant /j/ is restricted to positions adjacent to a vowel. It also cannot precede i or y. (For other restrictions on consonants appearing before i or y, see § Distribution above.)

The palatalized velar stops occur only before e (where they are spelt ki and gi) and before i (where they are spelt k and g; plain /k/ and /ɡ/ do not occur in that position).

Voicing and devoicing

Polish obstruents (stops, affricates and fricatives) are subject to voicing and devoicing in certain positions. This leads to neutralization of voiced/voiceless pairs in those positions (or equivalently, restrictions on the distribution of voiced and voiceless consonants). The phenomenon applies in word-final position and in consonant clusters.

In a Polish consonant cluster, including across a word boundary, the obstruents are either all voiced or all voiceless. To determine (based on the spelling of the words) whether a given cluster has voiced or voiceless obstruents, examine whether the last obstruent in the cluster, excluding w or rz (but including ż), appears to be voiced or voiceless. The consonants n, m, ń, r, j, l, ł do not represent obstruents, and therefore do not affect the voicing of other consonants; they are also usually not subject to devoicing except when surrounded by unvoiced consonants.[21] Some examples follow (click the words to hear them spoken):

  •  łódka [ˈwutka] ('boat'), /d/[t] before the voiceless k
  •  kawka [ˈkafka] ('jackdaw'), /v/[f] before the voiceless k
  •  także [ˈtaɡʐɛ] ('also'), /k/[ɡ] before the voiced ż
  •  jakby [ˈjaɡbɨ] ('as if'), /k/[ɡ] before the voiced b
  •  krzak [kʂak] ('bush'), /ʐ/[ʂ]; rz does not determine the voicing of the cluster
  •  odtworzyć [ɔtˈtfɔʐɨt͡ɕ] ('to replay'), /d/[t] & /v/[f]; w does not determine the voicing of the cluster
  • dach domu [daɣ dɔmu] ('roof of the house'), /x/[ɣ]; the rule still applies across a word boundary

In some dialects of Wielkopolska and the eastern borderlands, /v/ remains voiced after voiceless consonants.

The above rule does not apply to sonorants – a consonant cluster may contain voiced sonorants and voiceless obstruents, as in  król [krul],  wart [vart], [ˈswɔɲ], tnąc [ˈtnɔnt͡s].

At the end of a word obstruents are pronounced voiceless, (unless followed by a word beginning with a voiced obstruent, in which case the above cluster rules apply). For example, the /ɡ/ in bóg ('god') is pronounced [k], and the /zd/ in zajazd ('inn') represents a pronunciation like [st]. However, in some regional dialects, especially in western and southern Poland, final obstruents are voiced if the following word starts with a sonorant (here, for example, the /t/ in brat ojca 'father's brother' would be pronounced as [d]).

Hard and soft consonants

Multiple palatalizations and some depalatalizations that took place in the history of Proto-Slavic and Polish created quite a complex system of what are often called 'soft' and 'hard' consonants. These terms are useful in describing some inflection patterns and other morphological processes, although exact definitions of 'soft' and 'hard' may differ somewhat.

'Soft' generally refers to the palatal nature of a consonant. The alveolo-palatal sounds ń, ś, ź, ć, dź are considered soft, as normally is the palatal j. The l sound is also normally classed as a soft consonant – like the preceding sounds it cannot be followed by y, but takes i instead. The palatalized velars /kʲ/, /ɡʲ/ and /xʲ/ might also be regarded as soft on this basis.

Consonants which are not classed as soft are called 'hard'. However, there exists a subset of hard consonants, c, dz, sz, ż/rz, cz, dż, which often derive from historical palatalizations (for example, rz usually represents a historical palatalized r), and which behave like the soft consonants in some respects (for example, they normally take e in the nominative plural). These sounds may be called 'hardened' or 'historically soft' consonants.

In some phonological descriptions of Polish, however, a greater number of consonants, including especially the labials m, p, b, f, w, are regarded as occurring in 'hard' and 'soft' pairs. In this approach, for example, the word pies ('dog') is analysed not as /pjɛs/ but as /pʲɛs/, with a soft /pʲ/. These consonants are then also analysed as soft when they precede the vowel /i/ (as in pić /pʲit͡ɕ/ 'to drink'), although here the palatalization is hardly audible. Unlike their equivalents in Russian, these consonants cannot retain their softness in the syllable coda (when not followed by a vowel). For example, the word for 'carp' has the inflected forms karpia, karpie etc., with soft /pʲ/ (or /pj/, depending on the analysis), but the nominative singular karp, with hard /p/.

The consonants t, d, r (and some others) can also be regarded as having hard and soft forms according to the above approach, although the soft forms occur only in loanwords such as tir /tʲir/ ('large lorry'; see TIR). If the distinction is made for all relevant consonants, then y and i can be regarded as allophones of a single phoneme, with y following hard consonants and i following soft ones (and in initial position).

The historical palatalized forms of some consonants have developed in Polish into noticeably different sounds. Thus historical palatalized t, d, r have become the sounds now represented by ć, dź, rz respectively. Similarly palatalized s, z, n became the sounds ś, ź, ń. Palatalization of labials has resulted (according to the main phonological analysis given in the sections above) in the addition of /j/, as in the example pies just given. These developments are reflected in some regular morphological changes in Polish grammar, such as in noun declension.

Dialectal variation

In some Polish dialects (found in the eastern borderlands and in Upper Silesia) there is an additional voiced glottal fricative /ɦ/, represented by the letter h. In standard Polish, both h and ch represent /x/.

Some eastern dialects also preserve the velarized dental lateral approximant, [ɫ̪], which corresponds with [w] in standard Polish. These dialects also can palatalize /l/ ([lʲ]) in every position, whereas standard Polish does so only allophonically before /i/ and /j/.[22] [ɫ̪] and [lʲ] are also common realizations in native speakers of Polish from Lithuania, Belarus and Ukraine.

Rocławski (1976) notes that students of Polish philology were hostile towards the lateral variant of ł, saying that it sounded "unnatural" and "awful". Some of these students also said that they perceived the lateral ł as a variant of l, which, he further notes, along with the necessity of deciding from context whether the sound meant was /w/ or /l/ was what made people hostile towards this sound.[23] On the other hand, some Poles view the lateral variant with nostalgia, associating it with elegant pre-World War Two Polish culture.[24]

In the Masurian dialect and some neighbouring dialects, the phenomenon of mazurzenie occurs, whereby the retroflex /ʂ, ʐ, t͡ʂ, d͡ʐ/ merge with the corresponding dentals /s, z, t͡s, d͡z/, except when /ʐ/ is spelled rz, which a few centuries ago represented a palatalized trill /rʲ/, distinct from /ʐ/. In modern Polish, only the latter sound occurs.

Prosody

The predominant stress pattern in Polish is penultimate stress – in a word of more than one syllable, the next-to-last syllable is stressed. Alternating preceding syllables carry secondary stress, e.g. in a four-syllable word, where the primary stress is on the third syllable, there will be secondary stress on the first.[25]

Each vowel represents one syllable, although the letter i normally does not represent a vowel when it precedes another vowel (it represents /j/, palatalization of the preceding consonant, or both depending on analysis; see Polish orthography and the above). Also the letters u and i sometimes represent only semivowels when they follow another vowel, as in autor /ˈawtɔr/ ('author'), mostly in loanwords (so not in native nauka /naˈu.ka/ 'science, the act of learning', for example, nor in nativized Mateusz /maˈte.uʂ/ 'Matthew').

Some loanwords, particularly from the Classical languages, have the stress on the antepenultimate (third-from-last) syllable. For example, fizyka (/ˈfizɨka/) ('physics') is stressed on the first syllable. This may lead to a rare phenomenon of minimal pairs differing only in stress placement, for example muzyka /ˈmuzɨka/ 'music' vs. muzyka /muˈzɨka/ - genitive singular of muzyk 'musician'. When additional syllables are added to such words through inflection or suffixation, the stress normally becomes regular. For example, uniwersytet (/uɲiˈvɛrsɨtɛt/, 'university') has irregular stress on the third (or antepenultimate) syllable, but the genitive uniwersytetu (/uɲivɛrsɨˈtɛtu/) and derived adjective uniwersytecki (/uɲivɛrsɨˈtɛt͡skʲi/) have regular stress on the penultimate syllables. Over time, loanwords become nativized to have penultimate stress.[26]

Another class of exceptions is verbs with the conditional endings -by, -bym, -byśmy, etc. These endings are not counted in determining the position of the stress; for example, zrobiłbym ('I would do') is stressed on the first syllable, and zrobilibyśmy ('we would do') on the second. According to prescriptive grammars, the same applies to the first and second person plural past tense endings -śmy, -ście, although this rule is often ignored in colloquial speech (so zrobiliśmy 'we did' is said to be correctly stressed on the second syllable, although in practice it is commonly stressed on the third as zrobiliśmy).[27] These irregular stress patterns are explained by the fact that these endings are detachable clitics rather than true verbal inflections: for example, instead of kogo zobaczyliście? ('whom did you see?') it is possible to say kogoście zobaczyli? – here kogo retains its usual stress (first syllable) in spite of the attachment of the clitic. Reanalysis of the endings as inflections when attached to verbs causes the different colloquial stress patterns.

Some common word combinations are stressed as if they were a single word. This applies in particular to many combinations of preposition plus a personal pronoun, such as do niej ('to her'), na nas ('on us'), przeze mnie ('because of me'), all stressed on the bolded syllable.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Jassem (2003), p. 105.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Gussmann (2007), p. 2.
  3. Wells, John C. (19 December 2011). "the Polish way out". John Wells's phonetic blog. Archived from the original on 23 July 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  4. Rocławski (1976), pp. 75, 112–113.
  5. Rocławski (1976), p. 113.
  6. Rocławski (1976), pp. 75, 113.
  7. For example, Jassem (2003), Rocławski (1976) and Wiśniewski (2001)
  8. Gussmann (2007:2), citing Biedrzycki (1963), Biedrzycki (1978), Wierzchowska (1971:135).
  9. Linde-Usiekniewicz et al. (2011), p. 1430.
  10. 1 2 Gussmann (2007), pp. 2–3.
  11. Zagórska Brooks (1968)
  12. Rocławski (1976), pp. 130–181.
  13. Rocławski (1976), pp. 136, 179.
  14. Rocławski (1976), p. 132.
  15. Hamann (2004), p. 65.
  16. Gussmann (2007), p. 7.
  17. Zagórska Brooks (1964).
  18. Rocławski (1976), p. 158.
  19. Gussmann (2007:3), citing Dukiewicz (1995:32–33)
  20. "Polish". UCLA Phonetics Lab data. UCLA Phonetics Laboratory, University of California, Los Angeles. Archived from the original on 20 September 2017. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  21. Urbańczyk (1992), p. 369.
  22. Rocławski (1976), p. 130.
  23. Rocławski (1976), pp. 130–131.
  24. "Słynne gładkie ł". Radio Białystok. Archived from the original on 30 June 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  25. Gussmann (2007:8), deferring to Rubach & Booij (1985) for further discussion.
  26. Gussmann (2007), p. 9.
  27. Phonetics and Phonology of lexical stress in Polish verbs, Dominika Oliver, Martine Grice, Institute of Phonetics, Saarland University, Germany

Bibliography

  • Biedrzycki, Leszek (1963), "Fonologiczna interpretacja polskich głosek nosowych" [Phonological interpretation of Polish nasal vowels], Biuletyn Polskiego Towarzystwa Językoznawczego (in Polish), 22: 25–45
  • Biedrzycki, Leszek (1978), Fonologia angielskich i polskich rezonantów. Porównanie samogłosek oraz spółgłosek [Phonology of English and Polish resonants. Comparison of vowels and consonants] (in Polish), Warsaw: PWN
  • Dukiewicz, Leszek (1995), "Fonetyka" [Phonetics], in Dukiewicz, L.; Sawicka, I., Gramatyka współczesnego języka polskiego. Fonetyka i fonologia [Grammar of the contemporary Polish language. Phonetics and phonology] (in Polish), Kraków: Wydawnictwo Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN, pp. 7–103
  • Gussmann, Edmund (2007), The Phonology of Polish, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-926747-7
  • Hamann, Silke (2004), "Retroflex fricatives in Slavic languages" (PDF), Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 34 (1): 53–67, doi:10.1017/S0025100304001604
  • Jassem, Wiktor (2003), "Polish" (PDF), Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 33 (1): 103–107, doi:10.1017/S0025100303001191
  • Wiśniewski, Marek (2001), Zarys z fonetyki i fonologii współczesnego języka polskiego, Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Mikołaja Kopernika
  • Linde-Usiekniewicz; et al. (2011), Wielki Słownik Polsko-Angielski [Great Polish-English dictionary] (in Polish and English), Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, ISBN 978-83-01-14136-3
  • Morciniec, Norbert; Prędota, Stanisław (2005) [First published 1985], Podręcznik wymowy niemieckiej (6th ed.), Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, ISBN 83-01-14503-X
  • Rocławski, Bronisław (1976), Zarys fonologii, fonetyki, fonotaktyki i fonostatystyki współczesnego języka polskiego [Outline of phonology, phonetics, phonotactics and phonostatistics of the contemporary Polish language] (in Polish), Wydawnictwo Uczelniane Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego
  • Rubach, Jerzy; Booij, Geert E. (1985), "A grid theory of stress in Polish", Lingua, 66: 281–319, doi:10.1016/0024-3841(85)90032-4
  • Sadowska, Iwona (2012). Polish: A Comprehensive Grammar. Oxford; New York City: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-47541-9.
  • Urbańczyk, Stanisław, ed. (1992), Encyklopedia języka polskiego [Encyclopedia of the Polish language] (in Polish) (2nd ed.), Wrocław: Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich, ISBN 83-04-02994-4
  • Wierzchowska, Bożena (1971), Wymowa polska [Polish pronunciation] (in Polish), Warsaw: PZWS
  • Zagórska Brooks, Maria (1964), "On Polish Affricates", Word, 20 (2): 207–210, doi:10.1080/00437956.1964.11659819
  • Zagórska Brooks, Maria (1968), Nasal Vowels in Contemporary Standard Polish. An Acoustic-Phonetic Analysis, University of Pennsylvania

Further reading

  • Benni, Tytus (1924), Ortofonja polska: uwagi o wzorowej wymowie dla artystów, nauczycieli i wykształconego ogólu polskiego (in Polish), Książnica Polska
  • Benni, Tytus (1959), Fonetyka opisowa języka polskiego: z obrazami głosek polskich podług M. Abińskiego (in Polish), Wrocław: Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich
  • Biedrzycki, Leszek (1974), Abriß der polnischen Phonetik (in German), Warsaw: Wiedza Powszechna
  • Rozwadowski, Jan Michał (1925), Głosownia języka polskiego 1, Ogólne zasady głosowni (in Polish), Cracow: Gebethner i Wolff
  • Rubach, Jerzy (2008), "Palatal nasal decomposition in Slovene, Upper Sorbian and Polish", Journal of Linguistics, 44 (1): 169–204, doi:10.1017/S0022226707004987, JSTOR 40058031
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