This template formats pronunciation respellings of English words, and links to the respelling key at Wikipedia:Pronunciation respelling key. It formats stressed syllables with bold, small-cap text. For example, the word machine is respelled "mə-SHEEN"; using this template, the formatting is:

The formatting is: stressed syllables are in bold small caps, unstressed syllables are in lowercase. All text is in italics, and is wikilinked to the pronunciation key page.

Do not separate every syllable with a pipe: join unstressed syllables with a hyphen, and only use a pipe to separate them from stressed syllables.

How to use

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Once you have available the spelling syllables, you can put them in the {{respell}} template. To start with, one syllable per parameter (without dashes) does it. But there are situations, regarding stressing, that require more attention.

1. The template accepts up to seven syllables (parameters), separated by a pipe ("|"). The pipes are automatically replaced by hyphens, and they alternate the stressing: {{Respell|1|2|3|4|5|6|7}}1-2-3-4-5-6-7. If more parameters (syllables) are needed, just use two templates.

2. When unstressed syllables follow one another (– . . .), they need to be hyphenated together in a single parameter:

{{Respell|AL|gə-ridh-əm}}AL-gə-ridh-əm (algorithm)

3. Stressed syllables are counted from the last syllable backwards: the second-last, fourth-last, and sixth-last parameters are formatted as stressed. The other parameters are unstressed (. – .– . – .):

{{Respell|ə|RAK|nə|FOH|bee-ə}}ə-RAK-nə-FOH-bee-ə (arachnophobia)

4. When the final syllable is stressed (. –), one needs to add an extra apostrophe parameter:

{{Respell|mə|SHEEN|'}}mə-SHEEN (machine)

5. Case in the input does not change the displayed result, but if the input case does not match the displayed case, the page will be added to Category:Articles with Respell issues in case this indicates an error:

{{Respell|ə|rak|nə|foh|bee-ə}}ə-RAK-nə-FOH-bee-ə (displays correctly, but generates a warning that needs verification
{{Respell|Ə|RAK|NƏ|FOH|BEE-Ə}}ə-RAK-nə-FOH-bee-ə (ibid.)
{{Respell|ə|RAK|nə|FOH|bee-ə}}ə-RAK-nə-FOH-bee-ə (correct, no issue categorisation)

Where to use

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On Wikipedia, respelling is most commonly used to clarify the pronunciation of a name or topic in the lead section or introductory paragraph. Per the Manual of Style, respelling should follow the International Phonetic Alphabet, and never be used in place of it. The template provides a link to the key so that readers may easily look up how to pronounce the word. For example:

Worcestershire (pronounced /ˈwʊstərʃər/ WUUS-tər-shər) is a county located in central England.
'''Worcestershire''' ({{IPA-en|ˈwʊstərʃər|pron}} {{Respell|WUUS|tər-shər}}) is a county located in central [[England]].

The respelling key covers only English pronunciation, and should not be used for foreign names or words which have not been assimilated into English. If you need help transcribing the pronunciation into the IPA, please ask at Wikipedia talk:IPA for English.

When not to use

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The transcription may supplement the IPA in many cases, but it is not adequate for general use. For example, MOW and TOW are poor transcriptions, because people will tend to read them incorrectly as Moe, toe rather than as Mao, Tao, which is what they actually transcribe. The transcriptions is impractical for many words that will likely be misread. For example, "cobalt" is transcribed KOH-bolt, but many readers will read the second syllable wrongly as "bolt", which has a different vowel (BOHLT).

In such problematic cases other remedies need to be used. Rhymes, sound-alikes, or {{USdict}} transcription may be better.

Examples

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Here are examples of how to use the template for words with different numbers of syllables and different stress patterns:

Pattern Example Coding Result
No stress . of {{Respell|uv}} uv
Two syllables, first one stressed – . Ceres {{Respell|SEER|eez}} SEER-eez
Three syllables, middle one stressed . – . Haumea {{Respell|how|MAY|ə}} how-MAY
Stress followed by multiple unstressed syllables – . . . algorithm {{Respell|AL|gə-ridh-əm}} AL-gə-ridh-əm
Two stressed syllables – . – . Makemake {{Respell|MAH|kee|MAH|kee}} MAH-kee-MAH-kee
Two stressed syllables with strings of unstressed syllables . . – . . – . . . . disestablishmentarianism {{Respell|dis-ə|STAB|lish-mən|TAIR|ee-ən-iz-əm}} dis-ə-STAB-lish-mən-TAIR-ee-ən-iz-əm
Monosyllable with stress Pan {{Respell|PAN|'}} PAN
Two syllables, final stress . – machine {{Respell|mə|SHEEN|'}} mə-SHEEN
Two stressed syllables, first and final – . . – overconsume
Azerbaijan
{{Respell|OH|vər-kən|SEWM|'}}
{{Respell|AZ|ər-by|JAHN|'}}
OH-vər-kən-SEWM
AZ-ər-by-JAHN
Space issues
Too many syllables for one template if you wish upon a star {{Respell|IF|ew|WISH|ə-}}{{Respell|PON|ə|STAR|'}} IF-ew-WISH-ə-PON-ə-STAR
Word break fits inside a parameter betting odds {{Respell|BET|ing odz}} BET-ing odz
Word break does not fit inside a parameter Jazze Pha {{Respell|JAZ|ee}} {{Respell|FAY|'}} JAZ-ee FAY

See also

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IPA formatting templates for English: