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Serbian Alphabet With Pronunciation

The document summarizes the Serbian alphabet and pronunciation. It states that Serbian uses both the Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. The Serbian alphabet has 30 letters total, including 5 vowels and 25 consonants. Pronunciation is largely phonemic, with each letter corresponding to a distinctive sound. Stressed vowels are pronounced more clearly than unstressed vowels. Several Serbian consonant sounds do not have direct English equivalents. A table is provided showing the Serbian letters and their Latin equivalents along with examples of their English pronunciation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
356 views2 pages

Serbian Alphabet With Pronunciation

The document summarizes the Serbian alphabet and pronunciation. It states that Serbian uses both the Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. The Serbian alphabet has 30 letters total, including 5 vowels and 25 consonants. Pronunciation is largely phonemic, with each letter corresponding to a distinctive sound. Stressed vowels are pronounced more clearly than unstressed vowels. Several Serbian consonant sounds do not have direct English equivalents. A table is provided showing the Serbian letters and their Latin equivalents along with examples of their English pronunciation.

Uploaded by

sudarshan1991
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Serbian alphabet with pronunciation

Orthography

Serbian uses mainly Cyrillic alphabet, but the Latin script is also used. So, you should try to learn
both – starting with the Latin script. Unlike English, where the spelling is complicated, Serbian
spelling is much easier, since orthography is largely phonemic, In Serbian each letter
corresponds to the distinctive sound. For example, the letter ‘g' is always pronounced as [g]
(as in 'groom'), regardless where it appears in the word, unlike English where ‘g’ in ‘groom’ and
‘George’ are pronounced differently. We have separate letters for each sound.

Serbian Sounds

The table below shows an inventory of Serbian sounds. I provide both the Latin and Cyrillic
counterparts for each character.

There is a total of 30 letters (and sounds) in the Serbian alphabet: 5 vowels and 25 consonants.

• Note that r can be both a consonant and a vowel. For example, in the first syllable of the
word, Srbin ‘Serb’, ‘r’ acts as a vowel. You can hear a super short and weak ‘a’ (like a
schwa in the English word ‘sister’) followed by trilled [r].
• Stressed vowels tend to be pronounced more clearly and distinctly than their unstressed
counterparts. Stressed vowels are designated with ‘:’
• In general, in two-syllable words, the main stress or accent is on the first syllable. In
longer words, the stress may fall on any syllable except the last.
• Consonants: t, d, s, z, l are dental, which means that the tip of the tongue touches back
of the upper teeth.
• Consonants: p, t are unaspirated at the beginning of the syllable. So, in this position, p
and t sound like soft English b and d respectively.
• The following consonants sounds have no English equivalents: ћ, љ, њ. They are palatal
sounds. The sound ć/ћ is a bland of the English ‘ty’, (as in the British pronunciation of
‘dew’) and ‘ch’ (as in ‘church’). The sound lj/љ is a mix of ‘l’ and ‘y’, as in the British
pronunciation of ‘million’. Finally the sound nj/њ is a mix of ‘n’ and ‘y’, as in the English
pronunciation of ‘minion’.
• To hear either a Serbian or English pronunciation, just click over the words.

Larisa Zlatic. All rights reserved. Larisa Zlatic Language Services


http://www.studyserbian.com
Table 1: Serbian and English pronunciation

Aa /Aa Bb / Бб Cc / Цц Čč / Чч Ćć / Ћћ
[a:] ‘father’ [b] big [ts] ‘cats’ [ch] ‘chocolate’ No English
equivalent; [ty] ‘tune’ in B.
English

‘Ana’ ‘ Beograd ’ ‘cipela’ ‘čokolada ‘ Zlatić

Dd / Дд Dž/ Џџ Đđ / Ђђ Ee / Ee Ff/ Фф
[d] dog [ ] ‘George’ [dj] ‘juice’ [e] ‘bed’ f] ‘father’
[ ] ‘junk’ [ei] ‘make’
'danas’ ‘džak’ ‘đak’ ‘ekser’ ‘Filip’

Gg/ Γг Hh / Xx I i/ Ии Jj / Jj Kk/ Kк
[i:] ‘police’ [j] ‘you’
[g] god [h] ‘hot’ [k] ‘king’
[i] ‘fit’ [j] ‘boy’
‘gibanica’ ‘hvala’ ‘ima’ ‘ja’ ‘kralj’

Ll/ Лл Lj lj/ Љљ Mm/ Mм Nn / Hн Nj nj / Њњ


[l] ‘loop’, ‘cool’ [ly] ‘million’ (as in [m] ‘mother’ [n] ‘no’ [ny] ‘onion’ (n followed
British English) by short ‘y’)

‘lopov’ ‘ljubav’ ‘mama’ 'ne’ ‘njen’

Oo/ Oo Pp / Πп Rr/ Pp Ss / Cc Š š/ Шш
[o:] ‘bowl’
[p] ‘spot’ [r] ‘berry’ [s] ‘sun’ [ ] ‘shop’
[o] ‘pot’
‘ono’ ‘pismo’ ‘Srbin’, 'trava' ‘sunce’ ‘ništa’

Tt / Tt Uu/ Yy Vv / Bв Zz / Зз Žž / Жж
[t] ‘tone’ [u:] ‘food’ [v] victory [z] ‘zero’ [ ] ‘pleasure’,
[u] ‘put’ ‘Zhivago'
‘tata’ ‘uvo' ‘veliki’ ‘zec’ ‘život’

Larisa Zlatic. All rights reserved. Larisa Zlatic Language Services


http://www.studyserbian.com

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