Slovak phonology

This article is about the phonology and phonetics of the Slovak language.

Vowels



 * Vowel length is phonemic in standard Slovak. Both short and long vowels have the same quality. However, in native words, it is contrastive mostly in the case of the close and the open back  (but not the open front, which occurs only as short). Outside of adjective endings, the front long mid vowel  appears in loanwords along with one native word (dcéra), whereas the back long mid vowel  appears only in loanwords.
 * Eastern dialects lack the short–long opposition entirely. In Western dialects, vowels that are short due to the rhythmical rule are often realized as long, thus violating the rule.
 * The falling diphthongs, as well as  mostly replace ,  and  after soft consonants, though there are exceptions such as jún  'June'.  can also occur after  in some cases. Furthermore, at least  and  can also occur after hard consonants, as in kvietok  'little flower' and piatok  'Friday', though it is unclear whether there are any minimal pairs that distinguish  from  as well as  from  purely by vowel quality.  occurs only in a few morphologically conditioned environments.
 * The front rounded vowels occur only in loanwords. Just as other mid vowels,  are phonetically true-mid . The occurrence of these vowels has been reported only by, who states that the front rounded vowels appear only in the high register and medium register. However, in the medium register,  and  are often either too back, which results in realizations that are phonetically too close to, respectively,  and , or too weakly rounded, yielding vowels that are phonetically too close to, respectively,  and.
 * is phonetically a diphthong . It is shorter than other diphthongs; in fact, it has the length typical of short monophthongs. It occurs only after . There is not a full agreement about its status in the standard language:
 * states that the correct pronunciation of is an important part of the high register, but in medium and low registers,  is monophthongized to, or, in some cases, to.
 * states that only about 5% of speakers have as a distinct phoneme, and that even when it is used in formal contexts, it is most often a dialect feature.
 * state that the use of is becoming rare, and that it often merges with.

Phonetic realization

 * The close are typically more open  than the corresponding cardinal vowels. The quality of the close front vowels is akin to that of the monophthongal allophone of RP English.
 * The mid front are typically higher than in Czech, and they are closer to cardinal  (but still not as close, so ) than . In turn, the mid back  are typically more open than their front counterparts, which means that their quality is close to cardinal.
 * The open front vowel is a phonetic diphthong, transcribed  in this article. A narrower transcription is, as it is a diphthong that starts below and more central than  and glides to the frontest and closest allophone of.
 * The open back vowels are phonetically central.
 * Under Hungarian influence, some speakers realize as close-mid  and  as open back rounded . The close-mid realization of  occurs also in southern dialects spoken near the river Ipeľ.
 * are all rising, i.e. their second elements have more prominence.
 * The phonetic quality of Slovak diphthongs is as follows:
 * and have the same starting point, the same as the short . The former glides to the short , whereas the latter glides to the position more front than  , so that  ends more front than the starting point of.
 * is typically a glide from the position between and  to the ending point of.
 * is typically a glide from to the closest allophone of.
 * There are many more phonetic diphthongs, such as in Miroslav  and  in Prešov . Phonemically, these are interpreted as sequences of  preceded by a vowel. This  is phonetically  and it is very similar to the first element of.

Transcriptions
Sources differ in the way they transcribe Slovak. The differences are listed below.

Consonants

 * Voiceless stops and affricates are unaspirated.
 * Voiced stops and affricates are fully voiced.
 * is apical alveolar.
 * are not always pure palatal plosives, but as the author describes, those are the ideal and standard sounds based on their main characteristics.
 * are laminal.
 * are alveolar or denti-alveolar.
 * are alveolar.
 * Word-initial occurs only in two words: dzekať and dziny.
 * are alveolo-palatal affricates that are often classified as stops. Their usual IPA transcription is ⟨c, ɟ⟩. As in Serbo-Croatian, the corresponding alveolo-palatal fricatives do not occur in the standard language, thus making the system asymmetrical. The corresponding nasal is alveolo-palatal as well:, but it can also be dento-alveolo-palatal.
 * is palatalized laminal denti-alveolar, palatalized laminal alveolar or palatal . The palatal realization is the least common one.
 * describes an additional realization, namely a weakly palatalized apical alveolar approximant . According to this scholar, the palatal realization is actually alveolo-palatal.
 * The contrast is neutralized before front vowels, where only  occurs. This neutralization is taken further in western dialects, in which  merges with  in all environments.
 * are apical alveolar.
 * is either neutral or velarized.
 * Short is most often a tap.
 * The retroflexes are less often realized as palato-alveolar.
 * occurs mainly in loanwords.
 * is realized as:
 * Voiced fricative in onsets before voiced obstruents;
 * Voiceless fricative in onsets before voiceless obstruents;
 * An approximant that varies between labiodental and labio-velar  in coda;
 * Approximant in all other cases.
 * is an approximant, either palatal or alveolo-palatal. Between open central vowels, it can be a quite lax approximant.

Some additional notes includes the following (transcriptions in IPA unless otherwise stated):
 * can be syllabic: . When they are long (indicated in the spelling with the acute accent: ŕ and ĺ), they are always syllabic, e.g. vlk (wolf), prst (finger), štvrť (quarter), krk (neck), bisyllabic vĺča—vĺ-ča (wolfling), vŕba—vŕ-ba (willow-tree), etc.
 * has the allophone in front of the labiodental fricatives  and.
 * in front of (post)alveolar fricatives has a postalveolar allophone.
 * can be in front of the velar plosives  and.

Stress
In the standard language, the stress is always on the first syllable of a word (or on the preceding preposition, see below). This is not the case in certain dialects. Eastern dialects have penultimate stress (as in Polish), which at times makes them difficult to understand for speakers of standard Slovak. Some of the north-central dialects have a weak stress on the first syllable, which becomes stronger and moves to the penultimate in certain cases. Monosyllabic conjunctions, monosyllabic short personal pronouns and auxiliary verb forms of the verb byť (to be) are usually unstressed.

Prepositions form a single prosodic unit with the following word, unless the word is long (four syllables or more) or the preposition stands at the beginning of a sentence.

Official transcriptions
Slovak linguists do not usually use IPA for phonetic transcription of their own language or others, but have their own system based on the Slovak alphabet. Many English language textbooks make use of this alternative transcription system. In the following table, pronunciation of each grapheme is given in this system as well as in the IPA.

Sample
The sample text is a reading of the first sentence of The North Wind and the Sun. The transcription is based on a recording of a 28-year-old female speaker of standard Slovak from Bratislava.

Orthographic version
Raz sa severák a slnko hádali, kto z nich je silnejší.