Oral Vowels
a, i, u
a
[a] as in father: carro, amar, ala
i
[i] as in machine: fino, frio, dividir
u
[u] as in rune: rua, pular, urubu
e and o
When stressed, the letters e and o each have two possible pronunciations depending on the particular word:
e
[e] similar to ay in day: cedo, devo, caneta, colete
[ε] as in bed: cego, sete, canela, pochete
o
[o] as in bone: cor, boca, piloto, professor
[ɔ] as in top: copo, roda, filhote, veloz
When the rules of accentuation require stressed e and o to carry a written accent, the circumflex accent (^) is used to indicate the so-called close pronunciation of each, [e]/[o], and the acute accent (´) to indicate the open pronunciation [ɛ]/[ɔ]:
ê
[e]: gênero, você, vê
é
[ɛ]: péssimo, café, pé
ô
[o]: eletrônico, robô, xô
ó
[ɔ]: hóspede, brechó, nó
Compare:
sede [e] ‘thirst’ vs. sede [ɛ] ‘headquarters’; ele [e] ‘he’ vs. ela [ɛ] ‘she’
corte [o] ‘court’ vs. corte [ɔ] ‘cut’; ovo [o] ‘egg’ vs. ovos [ɔ] ‘eggs’
See also Metaphony on the alternation between [e] and [ɛ] and between [o] and [ɔ] in some words.
When unstressed, the pronunciation of e and o varies according to the position in the word:
e
[e] in most unstressed positions: exato, revisar, seguir
[i] as in movie in word-final position: mole, sinceridade, Gisele
o
[o] in most unstressed positions: tomate, começar, tocar
[u] as in into in word-final position: sapato, movimento, Marcelo
The unstressed word-final pronunciation also applies before final -s: cones, simples, patos, falamos
Oral Diphthongs
Oral diphthongs
The following vowel combinations form diphthongs consisting of a vowel + semivowel sound. Notice that the combination of a vowel followed by syllable-final l (pronounced [w]) also produces a diphthong:
ai
[aj] as in Kaiser: pai, cais, pairar
au, al
[aw] like ow in now: mau, causa, mal, calça
ei
[ej] like ey in hey: rei, feio, treinar
éi (ei)
[ɛj] like e in bed followed by y: fiéis, papéis, ideia
eu, el
[ew] like ay in day followed by w: meu, Deus, europeu, feltro
éu, el
[ɛw] like e in bed followed by w: céu, mel, escarcéu, carrossel
iu, il
[iw] like i in machine followed by w: riu, dirigiu, mil, juvenil
oi
[oj] like oy in boy: boi, noite, adoidado
ói (oi)
[ɔj] like o in top followed by y: bói/boy, lençóis, heroico
ol
[ɔw] like o in top followed by w: sol, lençol, molde
ou, ol
[ow] like ow in show: sou, pouso, toldo, soltar
ui
[uj] like ewy in chewy: fui, contribui, ruivo, juizado
ul
[uw] like u in rune followed by w: sul, multa, pulmão
Oral Triphthongs
Oral triphthongs
There are four oral triphthongs that only occur after [g] and [k] (spelt g and q):
uai
[waj] like why: iguais, quais
ual
[waw] like the exclamation wow: igual, qual
uei
[wej] like way: averiguei, adequei
uou
[wow] like the exclamation whoa: averiguou, adequou
Nasal Vowels
Nasal Vowel Tutorial
The nasal vowel sounds are very characteristic of Portuguese and differ from the oral vowel sounds in that, when you pronounce them, you allow air to pass through your nose as well as your mouth. Click on the link for a tutorial on how to make a nasal vowel sound.
Nasal vowels
There are five nasal vowels in Portuguese, and nasalization is indicated in spelling by placing a tilde (~) above the vowel or by the presence of m or n following the vowel in the same syllable. The letter m is used in word final position and before b and p, the letter n before all other consonants and at the end of few words of foreign origin. It is important to note that, in such cases, m and n are not themselves pronounced as separate sounds, e.g. campo ‘field’ is pronounced ['kãpu], and not *['kãmpu] or *['kampu], lindo ‘beautiful’ is pronounced ['lĩdu], and not *['lĩndu] or *['lindu]:
ã, am, an
[ã]: ímã, cantar, balangandã
in word-final position as a verb ending, am is pronounced [ãw]: falam, falaram, comeram, decidiram
em, en
[ẽ]: membro, venda, empresa, entrar, comem
im, in
[ĩ]: sim, pintar, impossível, índio
om, on
[õ]: compra, honra, bomba, sondar
um, un
[ũ]: um, uns, deslumbre, inundar
Nasal Diphthongs
Nasal Diphthongs
The following diphthongs consist of a nasal vowel + semi-vowel sound:
ãe, ãi
[ãj]: mãe, cãibra, pães, capitães
ão
[ãw]: mão, decisão, órgão
as a verb ending, this diphthong is also spelt am: falam, falaram, comeram, decidiram
em
[ẽj]: in stressed word-final position: trem, também, convêm
õe
[õj]: põe, decisões, botõezinhos
om
[õw]: in stressed word-final position: som, marrom, bombom
ui
[ũj]: this sound only occurs in the word muito
Nasal Triphthongs
Nasal triphthongs
There are two nasal triphthongs that only occur after [g] and [k] (spelt g and q):